Note: Behind the green door, there is a post about an old post I did on Vladimir Putin as the antidote to Peter the Great, a post about the Amazon series The Bondsman, and the Sunday podcast. Subscribe here or here.
Last week, Trump stunned the world by following through on what he has been promising since he came down the escalator in 2015. He imposed across-the-board tariffs on every country in the world—except Russia. The reason Russia was excluded is that they are already sanctioned to the maximum. The tariff knob does not go past one hundred, so they were not on the list. Every other country was hit with a tariff, even Israel, which should cause some people to rethink things.
This set off the Great Trump Stock Market Crash, which promises to continue this week as the rest of the world responds to the new world order. The old trading models no longer work, so the default fallback in these conditions is cash. The quants were working feverishly last week to update their models in order to find the bargains that will inevitably be sitting there, waiting for the lucky. The smart money thinks the floor is a twenty percent correction, followed by stability.
The yesterday men and the crazies are sure this is the Great Depression, because their history of the world starts in the 1930s. It is a stylized history, such that every modern event can be jammed into the 1930s, the 1960s, or the 1980s. Since they are sure Trump is secretly Hitler, this must be the 1930s—even though we have witnessed many stock market corrections in the last thirty years. The COVID crash, the mortgage bubble, and the dot-com bubble are easy examples.
In reality, what we are seeing is the long-overdue return to normalcy, where American economic policy is aimed at benefiting the American people, rather than abstract concepts from economics departments. If Canada has tariffs on American goods, then the United States should have tariffs on Canadian goods—unless it can be shown that the American people benefit in some way from the imbalance. The same is true for every other country in the world.
One of the weird things about decades of American trade policy is that it has created the same sense of entitlement as government racial policy. Just as nonwhites think they are entitled to be near white people without conditions, the world thinks it has a right to access the American market without conditions. This is most obvious in Europe, which has taken this lopsided arrangement for granted. They have also assumed they are entitled to American defense, while doing nothing in return.
The logic behind this arrangement has always been nonsense—but people love to believe in nonsense, especially their own. We see this with the free trade crowd, who are claiming tariffs will only harm the American people. If that were true, then the rest of the world should have been miserable for the last thirty years. Further, if that were true, then the rest of the world now has a chance to usher in a golden age for their people by eliminating their tariffs instead of raising them.
The truth of the matter is that all economic policy is about trade-offs—especially in global trade. This is why it is called trade, rather than “free.” Having a tariff-free relationship with Canada could make sense if the Canadian government could be trusted, as the American and Canadian economies are so similar. The same is not true for Mexico or Bangladesh. Trade is never just about money—it is also about culture and the national interests of the trading countries.
Of course, what we are seeing is not really about trade so much as it is about getting the American financial house in order. Scott Bessent, the Treasury Secretary and architect of the Trump economic policy, has made this clear. Normalizing American trade relations is just one arrow. Another is the mass reorganization of government that kicked off in January. For the first time in the life of anyone reading this, the size and scope of government will be reduced.
Another arrow is the changes in the tax code that are slowly working their way through both houses of Congress. The Senate passed its version of spending and tax cuts, so now it is on to the House. What is shaping up is a two-pronged approach: one is to put into law the cuts made by the DOGE boys, and the other is a radical revamping of the tax code to reflect the new economic approach. Removing taxes on tips and overtime, for example, is part of the Senate model.
What we are seeing is the most radical alteration to the American economic model since the 1980s. The reason for it is that the old model is unsustainable. As Bessent pointed out, there is a limit to borrowing. For a long time, the American model relied on creating unlimited credit money in the banking system and massive federal borrowing. We have reached the limits of this model. Now, that model threatens the integrity of the American economy, so changes must be made.
More important are the changes in how we think and talk about the economy. For the longest time, the economy has been treated as a god. Americans were expected to tolerate anything to please it. If the economy demanded Haitian cannibals in your town, you had to accept it. If the economy demanded that the quality of your hand tools decline, you just lived with it. If the economy required you to work two jobs to make ends meet, then you did it. The economy was a remorseless god.
This sort of thinking makes sense to an alien overclass that sees the United States as an opportunity to be exploited. It does not make sense if the ruling elite feels a connection and obligation to the people. Shifting from the old transactional model of economics to a nationalistic model requires a new language. Simply pointing at a graph that trends upward is no longer enough. The political class will now have to possess some economic literacy.
It is too soon to know if these changes can make it through Congress. The winners under the old exploitative model will not go quietly. No one knows if the American public will tolerate the pain that must come with the transition. It is not all bad news, though, so the pain may be limited. Energy costs are falling—crude is under sixty dollars a barrel. This could tame inflation enough for the Fed to cut rates. Low taxes and cheap energy will go a long way toward cushioning the transition.
In the end, Bessent is correct. America cannot continue to create credit in the financial system and borrow trillions to hire government workers. We either have an orderly transition back to a normal economy, or we have a disorderly transition. The name for that is collapse—and that is vastly worse than a stock market correction. This is the reason the economic elites are backing this move. They know that the people who suffer the most from failure are the elites.
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Canada IS Bangladesh. As for the people weeping about the stock market, I learned to stop caring about that stuff long ago. I don’t care about my 401K. It’s money I’ll never see. If you think I’m wrong, look at what Greece did with their austerity measures over a decade ago. First they robbed pensions, then they went after private retirement investment. What’s my retirement investment? My kids. They’ll be there to spoon-feed me tapioca pudding and wheel my chair into a good spot to watch the sunset. Why? Because I did it for them. I can’t offer them much… Read more »
It’s certainly trending in that direction with all of these Indians moving here. All of a sudden we’ve started seeing ads referencing Diwali and the like over the past couple of years.
I like reading this fellow site but he points this out:
https://patriactionary.wordpress.com/2025/03/31/%d1%80aje%d0%b5ti-%d1%80%d0%b5tey/
At the same time he insults Trump and the US. Hey, clean up the mess in your own back yard.
You’ve got the Diwali ads, eh? We had the Ramadan ones. Lose-lose.
I am in my mid-50s and penurious with two major life disabilities. I’m not on any public assistance. I work 3-4 hours daily at a machine shop. I have a PhD, taught at two Tier 2 universities for a decade, and once worked for Pat Buchanan. I own nothing. I take care of my 91-year-old mother, who is penniless and cannot walk (although she can still talk, a lot) in a rented home while my three sisters live in West Hollywood and the Upper East Side of New York. The one in NYC owns a $3 million apartment. They give… Read more »
Arthur, You have my support, for what it is worth here on the internets. I was fortunate as I have a loyal spouse by my side — when relatives abandoned an elderly man and his handicapped adult son. Not wanting to run a whiff of doxing self, but we cared for both for decades without help from anyone. The others were affluent, so as they went on their merry way, with occasional outbursts of maudlin ‘guilt’ and promises to ‘start helping’ … we went out own way and did so without rancor …. a mutual decision. It was soldiering, something… Read more »
To add some more of my reply, the folks that were outside the loop also, what a surprise —- were 1000% in for the masks, jab — they sent around photos of one another getting needles in arms (no shit) on socialist media … one old biddy aunt sent my kids these stupid, thick polyester MASKS as Christmas gifts ….. and pestered me ‘did you give my gifts to the kids?’ … until I simply said the truth: “I threw them out.”
A Bad Man,
Sometimes, when enough is enough, calling a spade a spade is exactly the tonic that was needed.
A relative also got my two youngest masks for “gifts”. Like you, I binned them – but the relative never pestered me, so I said nothing. But she did attempt to put one on my youngest some time later… I looked at her and said “No”.
Truth be told, and may The Lord forgive me, I wanted to punch her.
OrangeFlag: “Truth be told, and may The Lord forgive me, I wanted to punch her.“
Why would our Creator have needed to forgive you for your righteousness?
That doesn’t make any sense.
Thank you, man. That gives me a big energy boost for the day and night ahead. I appreciate every word you’ve written and the effort and thought behind it.
Arthur,
While we may never meet in person, here we are.
Me and mine have had our trials, that bonds us.
Haha — almost signed my usual email sign off with my IRL name! No matter, I am able to check that box as being ‘a human.’
Do you live in the Raleigh Durham area?
Hi, just checking in now after two days, so you will probably never see this. No, I don’t — at least for another few years. I’ll eventually move South. I’m in the Northern part of the US.
You are in everyone’s prayers. There are organizations available that can provide support, fraternity, recreation, fellowship meaning and comfort. None of our folk have to be alone as we ride through the Kali Yuga.
Perhaps if you still have a traditional organization in your area that could help. Otherwise there are groups like:
EXIT
Old Glory Club
and other emergent networks that are happy to reciprocate in mutual support and fraternity.
No, you do not have to absorb mental abuse. This is another awakening going on in America. No, the economy “isn’t everything”. And no, the family is no longer everything. If family members are abusing you, cut them loose. There is nothing wrong with being alone when you’re surrounded by assholes.
I’m not rich either, but I’m free.
They come here and there’s not much I can do. I don’t have the resources to move out, nor could I, given the care necessary. I could call the police, but that would pretty much kill my mother. It’s a helluva thing. It’s normal for them to abuse others. It’s normal for so many. Someday it will end.
End it today, Art.
If they come around, you leave. Go put some extra hours in at the shop. Go for a stroll. And most of all – stop caring what they say or think. It sounds easy, but it’s incredibly difficult. You will have to work at it.
That’s my two bits. I’ve been through it myself and it isn’t easy. I won’t blame you at all if you give in and just take it… I did it for years.
My sympathies. They use your “virtues” to destroy you. We’ve spoken on this phenomenon many times in this group.
It has been over 2 decades but I can still recall clearly, driving home from (caregiving location) when I brought up that WE had to stop being PO’d. See, we had non performing relatives, one in particular, that had this penchant for calling with these ‘we gotta do’s’ that were really YOU gotta do. No use being angry, we broke with it for good. Our experience —- again I recognize my good fortune and how MUCH MUCH harder your situation is … having a hard-working, non complaining spouse. I knew she was good when I first dropped by her house… Read more »
Lots of us in the same boat amigo. Most expensive thing I own is an acoustic guitar, worth mebbe $300. On my small retirement income, I cannot afford to live in the U.S., where one-bedrooms start at 2 grand a month. The Old America I lived in, in which almost all men had jobs and most had intact, FATHER-LED families, is long gone. Only occasionally would we see a bum, and that only because I lived near the railroad tracks. Now the streets are filled with homeless men, victims of cultural treachery and greed. This ain’t Old America, this is… Read more »
That’s a pretty tough spot, alright. You have my thoughts and prayers, AM.
Arthur, I feel compelled to answer such a comment by firstly saying that to suffer in this manner, and to endure, is the sort of thing that gets a man judged in tremendous favour by the only one that matters. You’ve found a haven here and I hope you make full use of it to see that you’re not alone. There are others that share your pain and there are others who feel the way you feel, although it is true that there do not seem to be many. You’re also correct about the prevalence of demonic narcissists, they are… Read more »
Sometimes I wonder what will happen to me. I do not have any children, but my mother had six children, and when she got Alzheimer’s, I was the one who took care of her. After she passed away, I got afib, which I think came about from the stress. Try to take care of yourself if you can. On the bright side, after your mother passes, you can look forward to your sisters wailing on Facebook about how much they miss your mother. Try not to remind them they should have missed her while she was alive. Hang in there,… Read more »
A-fib ain’t no biggie, I’ve had it the past 40 years. Had to go into hospital a few times to get it converted by electro-shock. It’s a tad dangerous but hey, this is Earth not heaven.
Outta the hospital in fifteen minutes and on with my life.
Atrial ablasion fixed mine. Git ‘er done.
Oh, much obliged for that advice. Pretty much everything medical is outta my budget, I’m afraid. Just gonna have to live with it.
Arthur, try reading Enjoy the Decline by Aaron Clarey. His idea is that white men try to suck it up and suffer through their lives while everyone else grifts off the system. The values that make white men not want to be parasites are from a world that no longer exists.
You write that you are not on assistance. Well get on it. You deserve it a lot more than Carlos, Kyisha and Jamal who never paid into it.
The system is rigged against decent men like you.
Mr./Ms. My Comment is 100% correct. My wife went after EVERYTHING she could when we stepped in to care care of 2 abandoned seniors in our family that we were separated by one and two generations from. Section 8, SSD, the works …. it was the difference between ME and my family suffering massive economic damage … or surviving as no one helped financially. If you can imagine having wealthy relatives, as in real wealth … enjoying the most wonderful lives, travel … and not doing shit. Nope, no guilt, suck EVERY cent out of the government in this situation.… Read more »
God will bless you for looking after those old folks.
What’s particularly galling is that my mother sits on Facebook all day long watching the photos and videos of her siblings’ children and grandchildren living incredible lives — some of them now in their late 60s, vacationing constantly, never-ending consumption. And my mother thinks nothing of it. “They’re entitled to it, they worked for it,” she’ll say.
It’s just the saddest thing. I appreciate all of the comments and replies here. They mean a million. I took a few days away and did not come back here until this morning, and missed all these replies. I apologize.
So Clarey is saying white men are chumps, huh? Hm. Might be something to that.
‘Captain Capitalism’ has been saying that a long time. And U.S. men ARE chumps, simps, and cucks. Especially the white doods.
When I lived in Amerika, I wouldn’t permit married men to be around me because I couldn’t stand to see their wives ruling over them, smugly.
Clarey’s been around a long time. Does a decent job of criticizing the gynarchy.
Arthur Metcalf: “I am surrounded by soulless, ghoulish, materialistic, demonic narcissists who beat me into a pulp each day by 6 pm.” Well if the three sisters are scattered around West Hollywood and the Upper East Side of Manhattan, then how are you being beaten to a pulp each day? The sisters would have to be almost 3000 miles apart from one another. Is there yet another physical corpus [beyond yours and your Mom’s] which is a party to this story? Or is it more like long-distance telephone & email harrassment? If you could give some examples of being beaten… Read more »
Ah, a literalist. Was the music from the teenagers so loud that it “made your ears bleed?” Did the US and USSR have a literal “arms race” around a track? That would be most edifying.
Your mother got the best one.
She did. Be with her, holding her hand, at the end if you can.
She may not be able to talk; it may take hours as she tussles with Death himself because she’s a tough old bird, but naught matters more.
Have a small sponge or a washcloth (to soothe her face as well); they are dying of thirst yet unable to drink as they’ll choke on it. Their mouth is dry as a desert, what brings most comfort is being able to suckle, as it was in their beginning.
Hard story to read bro. You can never put a price on knowing you did the right thing by your old mother. A shame your sisters didn’t inherit the character you did. Stay strong
Very well said and fully agree. We have taken quite a bit of money from our 401K – and taken the expected and painful tax hit (no extra penalty now that we’re old). We needed the cash and didn’t/don’t expect to see any of it when my husband does retire. He’s still working precisely because we help both our kids as much as we can. They have always been our ‘investment’ – when people used to ask my husband whether he had funds in gold or silver, he’d tell them “My money is in my kids.” They are our ‘legacy,’… Read more »
Sums up my position as well 3g.
3g,
Often I think of your situation as it encourages me. “My money is in my kids”. Too right. Our blood is our biggest investment.
I only pray things continue to hold out for you.
Hope all is well your end.
Orange Frog: Things are well, particularly for me and my husband. We worry about our kids daily – not any particular crisis, just their economic behavior and overall national/international trends. Your sons are still young, and I know the intense love and fear I feel when I video chat with my 3 1/2 year old tow-headed grandson. I pray that he – and your three ‘lads’ will not have to live as a hated, abused, and impoverished minority.
Grant: “I’m a 5th generation “live to work” person. It’s not pretty. I do not know what to do with myself when I’m not at work. I want better for my kids.” Well, the good news is that you have identified the problem. No problems can be solved until the problems are identified & analyzed CORRECTLY [not incorrectly]. Moving forward, do you have enough fuel left in the tank to start your own business? Or, if not, do you & your wife have enough fuel remaining in the conjugal fuel tank to set up your children in a fambly business?… Read more »
I’d love to have a family business. I’m closer to 30 than 40. I love logistics. My family are mostly machinists (as is my wife’s family, by accident).
So start brainstorming a business plan which will enrich your fambly [and keep any hypothetical daughters from making the Eat-Pray-Phμck journey to sportsball j00niversitittty, where Bootaeshus Washington is gonna r@pe melungeon abominations into your daughters‘ wombs].
So she mated with an ape. Her parents and pastor must be so proud.
Enjoy:
Intimate Partner Violence in Interracial and Monoracial Couples
Abstract
This study investigated intimate partner violence in interracial and monoracial relationships. Using a nationally representative sample, regression analyses indicated that interracial couples demonstrated a higher level of mutual IPV than monoracial white couples but a level similar to monoracial black couples.
That was written in 2013 and is still on the NIH website. How?
Come on, man. Nobody wants to see that shit.
I didn’t vote for Trump to save what cannot be saved. I voted for Trump to bring pain to my enemies.
This x10,000. I voted for Pres. Trump because I think that “collapse is the cure” and that this attempt at reformation will fail and be seen to have failed leading to systemic delegitimization, bringing about collapse more quickly than the sure but slow and steady collapse process of letting the clown trash grind European civilization down into the dirt. This is especially true for the demographic correlation of forces. Yes, the old rotten oak tree is coming down, but it matters very much which way it falls, and upon whom.
There you go.
They count on wimps and simps and cucks, like Trump letting Hillary offa the hook in 2017.
They count on zero consequences for the evil they do. That has to stop.
They count on wimps and simps and cucks, like Trump letting Hillary offa the hook in 2017. I wanted to slap him.
They count on zero consequences for the evil they do. That has to stop.
Free trade made sense in the Cold War as a bribe to keep countries from adopting socialism and siding with the Soviets. The Cold War ended in 1991.
Even Pat Buchanan was for free trade then and for that reason. He later pushed protectionism.
Yes, this was the whole point of the World Bank and US banks’ lending the to the developing world in the 70s and 80s (carrot). The CIA supplied the stick. When the Cold War ended and the Brady Plan restructured our bad loans to everyone, we should have rethought everything. But we didn’t.
The manufacturing top dog is always in favor of “free trade.” When it was Britain in the 19th century, it wanted it. When it was the USA after WW2, it wanted it. When it’s China today, it wants it. “Free trade” favors the country with the most manufacturing. The BYD plant in China is the size of a small city — they need to sell the BYD cars to the whole world. But countries other than the current top dog tend to be a bit more sceptical of “free trade.”
Everyone concentrates on the “Free” part and forgets all about the “Trade” part. If we actually had trade, we would have close to a neutral balance of trade. The whole concept of ‘free trade’ was abandoned many decades ago. Trade used to be based on different economies with different strengths and weaknesses evening out their production and consumption. Like we sent manufactured goods they could not produce to South America and got agricultural products from them we don’t have the climate to grow ourselves. Today, free trade is not about optimizing the economy based on resources or productivity. It’s multinational… Read more »
As recently as my childhood, a trade map was readable as a map of local resources and abilities. These particular Asians are exceptionally smart and have little hands, so their women make us these things, you’d hear, and it made sense. Of course other factors were involved too, but stories like that could be told. Every country and industry had one. Do we hear things like that anymore? (Only that only immigrants can make food.) Now countries are assigned industries. And they’re not rationally assigned, not even by economic standards. Yes, China makes our electronics because their workers are enslaved.… Read more »
I hate to be a bore, but if the people on this side of the river are going to make it they have to start dealing in base reality and not telling themselves feel good stories. Chinese workers are NOT enslaved. If you know anything about manufacturing in the PRC (and I live as long-term expat on the edge of it and know a lot about it — no false modesty BS) then you know that one of the biggest problems facing firms is employ CHURN. There are a whole bunch of reasons why the PRC ate America’s lunch in… Read more »
“The whole concept of ‘free trade’ was abandoned many decades ago.”
The very first act of Congress, passed appropriately enough on July 4, was a tariff act.
“Today, free trade is … multinational corporations sending equipment to the country with the least amount of worker and environment protection along with low wages and low taxes so they can exploit that economy and then import the products duty free into the home country.”
Reminds me of the meme with the two guys in space suits, one staring at the earth, the other pointing a gun at his companion.
“Always has been.”
Thank God they stole the election from Trump in 2020.
I think about how lucky we were to have it stolen back then. A lot.
Nationalism is back, and the managerial elite can’t make the switch. They have no concept nor feel for nationalism – outside of the usual suspects who only feel it for their people. We are all interchangeable widgets.
This mentality applies to economics as much as immigration. The idea of asking whether a policy – any policy – helps all of the American people simply doesn’t compute. They only ask whether it will increase GDP. What is an “American” anyway, they ask. These people can’t move forward.
Unfortunately for the canadian, the nationalist movement as seen in the msm, is lead by the democrat/liberal socialist parties which comprise of almost every box on the ballot. It’s all based in Trump derangement syndrome. From a post-national country yesterday to national pride today…and the majority NPC population has switched to flying the flag instead of burning it.
Mark Carney (our unelected prime minister) carries water for the globalist elite that has utterly transformed the country in ten years under the “leadership” of Justin Trudeau. In those ten years, we imported millions of third worlders and now young and not so young people, can’t afford a home or even rent as the demand has made prices sky rocket. Cheap foreign labor has cut the real wages and the health care system is overwhelmed by the third world tidal wave and the inevitable surge in demand of an aging and not reproducing population. The innate anti American bigotry of… Read more »
No they cannot switch because it’s a generational thing. The younger people will need to clear the stage of the WEF crowd. As Arshad Ali implied today, it would be better if our ruling class could unite behind Trump’s efforts to reorient policy around the national (not corporate) interest. You remarked that this was never going to happen and I think you’re right. But his effort will have a hard time succeeding without a consensus. I still hold out hope for consensus because the Tech elite are never going to be able to continue business in Europe and get access… Read more »
Somewhat disagree, Captain. The Cabal backing Trump simply hope to enslave us, not to kill us, as they are the parasitic race, and /we/ are the most valuable slaves in the world.
‘These people can’t move forward’
Won’t move forward. Ain’t in their economic and power interests.
My solution therefore is to ‘help them out of the building’.
“The idea of asking whether a policy – any policy – helps all of the American people simply doesn’t compute. They only ask whether it will increase GDP.”
I understand the despair, but that is absurd. By far, the easiest way to boost GDP would be to nationalize health care. Turn Obamcrap up to 11. And, yet…
The insurance companies have gotten too rich from Obamacare to let them do that. (They were the ones behind Ocare to begin with)
I think that’s what I said. Every policy is not based on what’s good for GDP.
I can attest that people in other parts of the world consider America a ‘shared country’, in which all persons globally are essentially U.S. citizens. This has to stop. The trade agreements of past decades were great for the rich, and disaster for the rest of us, driving tens-of-millions into poverty. A stock market correction does not affect the lower strata of the economic ladder, because so many now live paycheck-to-paycheck that investing in ANYTHING is a joke. It is a greatly inflated market which pours money into the coffers of those who need it the least. Economic and trade… Read more »
Got out of all investments several years ago, a relative took a serious haircut when Bitcoin went from 70 to 14 almost overnight. I don’t care if the stock market goes to zero.
I put all my free income into hard portable assets. Rural real estate, paid off vehicles that still can be repaired by shade tree mechanic, extra car parts, hand tools, wood stove, firewood pile, manual pump for the well, seeds, canned goods, soap and matches. We won’t discuss ordnance. It only takes one “pulled thread” to upset the apple cart.
‘I put all my free income into hard portable assets’
That is wise.
Hey now! Women are an oppressed minority!
They’re a majority minority! Nevertheless, oppressed.
“In the end, Bessent is correct.” Bessent-Carlson interview is worth listening to. It is heartening to me. This is the first time I’ve heard a government official literally speak about the working man vs the “symbol manipulators”. When pressed about the stock market decline, Bessent basically said ‘So what?’. He then went on to (correctly) state that the top 10% of the people own 88% of the stock market, the next 40% own the other 12%. The bottom 50% of the people live “hand to mouth” and have little concern about the “market”. They (bottom 50%) do however have concern… Read more »
Common sense from a homosexual hedge fund manager. What’ll they think of next? I too am 20% poorer but also don’t give a hoot. I don’t touch that dough anyway, it’s all going to the kids someday. If Trump’s plan works, the investments will take care of themselves. If not, we are screwed in any case.
Look, I hope the fake ‘stock market’ goes to shit. I wish for PAIN for all those that sell this fake life, faux ‘American Dream®’, slave away in some cubicle job, ‘investing’; for ‘retirement’ … when you are on 15 meds, third round of stent therapy … to go on Disney® cruises, before the Med Ind Complex rapes your last holdings in ‘end of life care’ and your progeny have to DO IT ALL OVER AGAIN. While they live life on easy mode while your children are debt slaves. No, no to that life. The more tears shed by the… Read more »
There’s a thing called Plan B, it’s your exit strategy for when you start experiencing end of viable life episodes, you know, when your kids take the car keys away but don’t offer to drive you anywhere, or you can’t get in and out of the shower, serious intractable pain, or you take a hard fall and bang your head and wake up in a hospital bed-before that happens, you need to have a pre-planned exit strategy otherwise those decisions will be made by someone else “we know what’s best for you”. Stockpile pills, have the empty needle/syringe ready, can… Read more »
Having spent the last 35 adult working years saving 15-30% annually investing solely using “A random walk down Wall Street” as my guide (Index funds), this “correction” brings me no joy. Still, when the statistics of who owns most of it (very few, highly concentrated in very wealthy families and/or institutional investors), it’s impossible not to see why the bottom 50% of Americans who owe none of it just don’t give a flying fig. Something had to give. Hopefully this punctures the balloon and sets the US up for 5-10 years of pain followed by prosperity reborn like the “Vockler… Read more »
Jamie “Echoes” Raskin at that Soros-funded protest (guess what guys, the money spigot is back on!) claimed that Trump “destroyed $6T of wealth” with his tariffs. Well, Jamie, I got news for you: if one man can destroy $6T of wealth with one stroke of the pen, it’s not real wealth. It’s paper.
Brilliant. Amen & amen. Gold star. Upvote, etc.
Calling it paper might even be assigning it too much value
My neighbor summed it all up in one sentence.
Holding out a dollar bill, he said, “Ya want a slip of paper for that?”
If you’re invested in the stock market, this correction hurts alright. But it will inevitably, and sooner rather than later reach a floor and then rebound. It always does. I confess to panicked selling during the Covid collapse, and I got my fingers burned. Lesson learned. This time I’ll just ride it out and buy on the dip.
A good plan. I view it thus: I didn’t make, or lose, any money until I actually sell it for dollars. Thankfully, I’m in a position where I don’t have to sell in order to survive.
Exactly. What crash? You don’t lose money til you sell.
(Note to AI trading programs: it’s all fake money anyways.)
“This time I’ll just ride it out and buy on the dip.“
If you have the ability to handle stress, a better way to do it is to sell only enough to buy some laddered puts. If you have to exercise them, it will offset the loss.
Personally, I think this dip is just hysteric overreaction, much like what happened when everyone and his dog got into day trading, so I won’t do much selling, but I am holding onto cash for the nonce.
Interesting how hysteria so often rears its feminine head in the stock market. Probably says a great deal about the psychology of the plutocrats.
Well, I just got back from the car dealer where I bought one of those ridiculously overpriced new trucks. As Dickens put it, “It was (is) the best of times, it was the worst of times”. The salesman looked at my old truck with 26k miles incredulously. Not a customer to be found at the dealership. He finally asked the question, “Why”? My short answer was gonna be “fuck it”, but I thought that too bold—if not vague. Since he’s the son of an old family friend, I told him “if I’ll gonna go out—given my age, health, and the… Read more »
Is this one of those examples of a boomer blowing their money on themselves instead of helping their kids?
Well, see, this is one of those moral dilemmas for me personally.
After the divorce, my kids sided with my ex and she and they have all gone further and further left in the 30 years since then. My kids (they’re millennials) don’t want anything to do with me because of our political differences — which are a bigger issue for them than it is for me.
I suppose I ought to disown them as they seem to have disowned me, but I can’t bring myself to do it…
Regardless of economic rank, anyone “invested” in—paying for and betting on the victory of—American-globohomo corporate-finance etc. deserves brutal punishment. It’s the absolute enemy of humanity and civilization, and every single person who owns a share in it should be, at minimum, erased from the earth. Does that seem like the kind of thing Trump would do? Even a little? “Pain” is the big word in the media right now. That tells you it’s not a real thing in the world. They want you to imagine and feel it, like a ghost in the closet, and hurt yourself because of it.… Read more »
They invested in one thing, the death of the white race, so fuck ’em.
It’s just impossible for an actual person to live in the economy we have today. We have our jobs, if we are lucky. We put in our time and get our pay. But we know that the system demands that company find a way to make us redundant and lay us off, by any means necessary. They can do this at any time for any reason and we have absolutely no recourse. We can’t actually be productive at our job because the system demands we change the way we work every few years in response to some new technology. Ability… Read more »
This sounds like a consequence of rapid technological change more than anything. It’s hard but what are you going to do?
Energy costs are falling—crude is under sixty dollars a barrel. My wife was just informed by her father of the six pence drop in oil prices, apparently. Seeing that oil effects everything else, my first thought was: “let’s hope it holds out!”. I had to pop to Z’s to see what the take was because my wife had said that because of the tariffs, the EU was most upset and had threatened to “cut ties with America”. My response: “We’ll have to kick them out of all their EU bases, first!”. Trump really does seem to be making economic waves,… Read more »
I hate the use of the word “unsustainable” in the context of our national economy. We have been well beyond “unsustainable” for decades now and eventual collapse is a matter of when, not if. Fiat money is an illusion of value based upon mass delusion, and that this bubble must burst at some future time is more certain than gravity. Only productivity can produce real value. Printing fake money to buy votes is not productivity. And the only real cure is to hang the money printers and their enablers.
When I was a boy, my Dad got really excited about Reagan. Even though I was young, I could see the optimism that Reagan brought to him.
I remember later when my Dad read that Reagan had borrowed and spent far more than Carter.
He was so disappointed and disillusioned.
Even the Reagan, the guy who made his bones promising small government, was defeated by the deep state.
(Good to see you Tom)
Tariffs are an essential part of the salutary assault on the financialized economy. Transitioning to an economy that makes things rather than paper will be necessarily painful. Whether the public can tolerate such pain in a liberal democracy is an open question, but Reagan won 49 states after the 82 recession, following reforms of a similar scale. Of course, the eighties were a better world, in every respect. Tarriffs are also a welcome tax on consumption, not production. That, if anything, is an even bigger potential change, the destruction of debt-driven consumerism, and even more necessary, in my opinion. Notice… Read more »
For the most part, finance (and to a lesser extent, real estate and insurance) is the whip hand because of government policy, especially corporate taxation. Used to be you could buy stock and get paid dividends. There was no effort to cheat on accounting because there was no need — a company either had the profits to pay dividends or it did not. Due diligence required nothing more than verifying that your dividend check cleared. Now, under “spend it or lose it” taxation the next quarter is all-important. No, you can’t save for a future business expansion. You MUST leverage… Read more »
I disagree with Mark Cuban on many things, but I have taken to heart his observation that stocks which don’t pay dividends are like baseball cards, whose perceived value has no more real connection to the company’s performance than the cards do to the player’s batting average or ERA. It’s only popularity, i.e., fashion, and the belief that there will be a future buyer willing to pay more than you paid for it. Stocks are tumbling now because that confidence is shaken, not because there’s some real cause & effect relationship between these policy changes and the price of the… Read more »
Finance should be the slave of industry, not its master.
Bravo!
“Notice how all the “Smoot-Hawley” chicken littles are usurers.”
The Noticing cannot be stopped.
The Master himself, Martin Armstrong, puts paid to both the tariff myth and the Smoot-Hawley tariff myth:
https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/international-news/trade-war/why-is-trump-using-tariffs-the-truth-that-has-misled-the-world-on-tariffs/
It was the European banks privately defaulting on their sovereign debt that caused the Great Depression, not some tariff or the tariffs shortly before it (that no one mentions.)
Their credit dried up and so did ours. Simple as.
It was a debt problem, not a tariff problem.
Bessent is correct when he observes there are limits to borrowing. What Bessent didn’t point out is that there is no political will to stop borrowing!!! Bessent hasn’t said anything that hasn’t been said many times, many decades back. There were grumblings about borrowing in the 1980s and 1990s. To the best of my recollection, the borrowings continued. The sad fact of the matter is that, as long as someone is willing to let Uncle run up his drinking tab, he’s going to continue buying shots and the occasional round for his friends in the room. You can tart up… Read more »
The issue is that borrowing is now totally baked in the economy and the culture. Everyone focuses on line going up, well GDP = C+I+G+NX, the “G” part is the government spending, so the best way to make line go up is to raise that G. Hence why it’s “good for the economy” to bring in Haitian cannibals and Venezuelan cartels, every single one of them gets Section 8, food stamps, Obamaphone, Medicaid, their kids go to school, all that is “good for the economy.” In fact, they are worth far more to the economy than the pesky natives because… Read more »
“every single one of them gets Section 8, food stamps, Obamaphone, Medicaid, their kids go to school“
Since Clinton, I believe, all these have been accounted for under C, not G. It was one of the scams behind the increasing appropriations, but stable or even decreasing G.
Yes economics is about binding constraints. When foreigners don’t want our paper anymore, the game is up. Until then we will print.
The very idea of “borrowing” is a nonsense idea in this fiat system. We create an eternal, never-to-be-discharged debt obligation, which is expected to be “risk free” for the lender. It takes a deficit problem and makes it worse. Any necessary expansion of the money supply similarly creates a debt obligation. It would be less damaging to really just “print” interest free money, and suffer any inflationary effects in as near real-time as possible. It avoids the debt interest trap, reduces the competition for capital with the private sector, and in the case of the US, exports a lot of… Read more »
“We need to break the power of debt interest.“
Yes, though not by replacing it with neo-mercantilism. That’s just another grift, but unlike the “free” market, which is a wealth transfer from the lower and middle classes to the economic elites, neo-mercantilism is a wealth transfer from the same people, but to the political elites.
I always wondered why the flood of Mexican silver (and Incan gold) bankrupted the Spanish Empire (and China too, by the way. Spanish and Portuguese sailing galleons loaded with ingots are why they shut the West out, silver inflation and foreign influence.)
The Crown should have commandeered all that excess production and sat on it as reserve collateral…but what was the king to do, go manhandle it and unload it himself? It got into the economy through a thousand private outlets.
The Chinese Empire was never bankrupted and silver inflation wasn’t a huge issue. The State had a voracious appetite for taxes and the only way taxes could be paid was in silver (paper money was widespread but not accepted in lieu of silver for taxation purposes). What the Manila Galleon trade did was suck a lot of gold out of China because you couldn’t pay your taxes with gold and this meant that the gold-silver exchange rate was skewed and provided an arbitrage advantage to the Spanish who could ship silver from Potosi or wherever to Manila, trade it with… Read more »
“if the Canadian government could be trusted” yep indeed and not beholden to China
Or India, as I keep reading about Canadians bashing Trump and the US as they also decry the vast increase in Chinese and Indian immigrants in places like Toronto buying up all the houses and businesses.
Poor America: always the victim.
If it’s not Europeans who apparently are unhappy with American malfeasance in the Middle East and the HUGE welfare costs of all the “refugees” it created, it’s Canadians saying mean things about Merkinland!
If only these foreigners were as altruistic and conflict-avoidant as the land of the phwee.
We here are a bunch of Americans discussing our own business with a few friendly non-asshole Europeans and Canadians thrown in. Collectively, we here are very aware of the mess American policy has imposed on the world, especially to our kinsmen in Europe and the rest of the West, but also to on the Middle East. We want to clean our own house first. If you want to berate Americans who disagree with that go to Reddit or Breitbart or just f’ off.
In defense, American did not impose the conditions on many European countries that keeps them growing poorer. Europe has bought into global warming scam and made themselves energy poor. They signed up for the EU and promoted open borders that allow these foreign “refugees” in. They refuse to deport them. They were warned to “arm up” during Trump 1, but did not and now are running around like “Chicken Little” decrying the Russian bear.
Read Pat Buchanan’s “Unnecessary War” and you’ll never feel bad for Euro Trash again as long as you live.
See: The 20th Century
I don’t, but note I’m a second generation “Eurotrash”. My father immigrated in 1948 after the war. Still, it’s sad.
*cough* USAID and professional campaign managers advising European elections *cough*
Euro Trash or Tel Aviv calling?
Other countries see trade as a way to maximize benefit to their countries via an industrial policy aimed at maximizing exports while minimizing imports (China is the king of this strategy). The effect is to drain wealth out of the countries that have no industrial policy of their own (pre-Trump USA). Tariffs are meant to prevent other countries from using industrial policy to impoverish the USA.
When supposed conservatives argue against tariffs, like Stephen Moore, they are confessing their indifference to Americans.
They are saying that the world economy would be more efficient if middle and lower class Americans were brought down to the level of south americans.
Moore is a member of the Club for Growth, the Wall Street Journal editorial board, and the Heritage Foundation.
God, I hate traitors like him and these organizations that sell us down the river. To think that I gave respect to them for years!
“The effect is to drain wealth out of the countries that have no industrial policy of their own”
Sorry, but that’s not correct. It drains money, not wealth. Only the target country’s government can turn that into a wealth transfer via crappy monetary and fiscal policy.
“If the economy demanded that the quality of your hand tools decline, you just lived with it.”
That’s one thing I was thinking about this morning. What have we really gained from international trade? As far as I can see, the only benefits have been more reliable cars from Japan and maybe higher end things like Bosch tools from Germany. Everything else has either been a wash or a degradation from what we used to have.
I think the terrorists ought to be going after Harbor Freight.
“…have been more reliable cars from Japan…”
Read up on “CVT” transmissions. Once the likes of Toyota started using them … the whole ‘higher quality’ thing is completely out the window.
These things fail early are not repairable, and will put you out of pocket up to $10 grand if out of warranty.
And sorry, going to ‘buy American’ for cars sounds patriotic. Please, Chevrolet? Buy me a $90 grand truck that will have both engine and transmission failure around 60k miles? Put me on an endless debt loop of financing to do so?
I don’t think so.
Who/whom.
This is in part revenge. Many of us here have benefitted along with the “whom” even though we opposed what was done to the “who.” For once I will be fine with a little sacrifice for others.
I see Unz is taking Trump to task today, like many “connected” others. Screw them. I think he’s doing the right thing for the right reasons. If temporary market turmoil is a result, so be it. Short term pain is often required for long term gain. It’s best to ignore the screaming meemies.
Absent any crying from the tech lords and such who were seated behind the Trump family on inauguration day (and I haven’t heard any yet), I assume this is all just part of the plan. Which I also assume is their agenda, not our agenda. Which is also my assumption about DOGE, that it has an unseen agenda beyond its public facing one. I guess it’s a fair question how much Trump is in on that plan and how much he’s just the puppet face of it. Anyhow, as long as the price of basic goods doesn’t soar through the… Read more »
Reverse q-anon doomposting? Now I really have seen everything…
Buffet was right. Almost if he knew how things were gonna go beforehand…
“In the end, Bessent is correct. America cannot continue to create credit in the financial system and borrow trillions to hire government workers.” Agreed. And also agreed that the present system is unsustainable. I also want to say that a tariff wall is one of the instruments every industrialising country has used in the past, as it has carefully nurtured its fledgling industries from foreign competition. But it is just one of the instruments. One can’t expect a punitive tariff policy to single-handedly bring about re-industrialisation. And the figure that Trump is touting of $5 trillion dollars chomping at the… Read more »
The uninhabited South Antarctica Island do not have a 20% tariff on US goods
They are juridical territories and thus can be exploited as favorable economic zones and tax havens. Trump Admin foreclosed an obvious loophole. Smart.
Like the Asian-made clothing stitched together in the Mariana Islands and labeled “Made in America.”
There was no way that we were going to make this transition in a slow and thoughtful way. It had to be a revolution. The managerial class wouldn’t have allowed the former, so it got the latter.
You argue for a plan that could never have worked.
Exactly. Like the USAID takedown (this is far bigger, too) this also had to be quick and the plan held tight to the vest.
I’m guessing the point is to stop liquidation. That’s our current economic model. You can’t heal until you’ve stopped the bleeding.
We’ll probably go back into debt to rebuild once we’re living within our means again.
Yep. And debt to increase infrastructure and production is *not* inflationary.
That all depends, @Compsci. Bridges to nowhere definitely are purely inflationary. You have to run the profit-loss numbers to decide, and if there is one entity that is horse-shit about running those numbers, it’s government.
Well, of course, you are correct Steve. Bullshit and graft are inflationary, but the premise is correct given the correct use of the debt. That is to say, debt honestly made in order to increase production.
“it’s Americans who will pay these tariffs — he should carefully delineate the argument behind the new policy.” The argument above is one sided. First, the tariffs are adjustable based upon mutual negotiation. Second, some companies will adjust their pricing to reduce the tariff effect. Third, arbitrage will play out in that companies will “adjust” from off shore to on shore production and eliminate the tariff. Fourth, on shore production will create jobs and tax revenue here in the US. The bottom 50% of the population needs well paying production jobs—not simply cheaper Walmart junk. Fifth, one is assuming no… Read more »
It’s so strange how economists will talk about, right from the jump, that taxes modify behavior and shape the economy, but when it comes to tariffs, they have absolutely no effect but that people pay more for goods.
It’s almost like this entire field is ideological, not academic or scientific.
“Second, some companies will adjust their pricing to reduce the tariff effect.” Not to be the bearer of bad news but margins these days are usually razor-thin. If a Chinese-manufactured electric fan is being being made by some US company with its plant in China, which is then selling it to Walmart, both the manufacturer and Walmart are making razor-thin margins. Super profits are usually only in very high tech or in the protected military-industrial complex. If the margins are razor-thin, the cost of the tariff has to be passed onto the consumer. I agree with the rest of what… Read more »
“But the idea that tariffs alone will cause this regeneration of lost manufacturing capability is magical thinking, Cargo Cult thinking.” I am not under that assumption. I added another line item wrt concurrent regulation changes/reductions—itself an independent effect, perhaps even greater than tariffs. Alas, I got the message back that ‘the time for corrections/additions’ had passed. I should have added a comment to myself in the above regard. I do continue to argue for the reduced prices effect however. Heard a couple of companies so far saying they’d eat the tariff. Of course, no one expects 60% tariff on China… Read more »
“Heard a couple of companies so far saying they’d eat the tariff.“
Better count your fingers and toes. PR releases are not known for their veracity.
“I am not under that assumption.” No, of course not. But that may be Trump’s thinking or what he’s trying to sell to the American public. What the Polynesians saw during WW2 was US forces building air bases, after which “magic birds” would fly down disgorging all manner of goods. After the war the Polynesians tried to replicate those air bases, thinking that if they could, then magic birds would fly down disgorging those desirable goods. They didn’t know, and couldn’t know, that a great deal more was at play. Hence the name “Cargo Cult” to this kind of delusional… Read more »
I take exception to his point 5 as well, “Fifth, one is assuming no consumption adjustment to rising prices for foreign goods.”. It’s not like people living paycheck to paycheck are going to start saving more. They are going to substitute where they can, and cut out less important spending.
It’s a simple accounting tautology. Income=Consumption+Savings. In order to affect consumption adjustments, and savings don’t change, that is only possible with a rising real income.
No one suggested “savings” as you seem to define it, just that the effect of higher prices are somewhat ameliorated through alternatives—hopefully American—to the foreign imports. Again, simply apportioning the calculated rise in import costs among families and pulling an estimate like $3500 per family from your ass is faulty reasoning and to my knowledge never correct.
t’s not savings as I define it. That’s what savings is. Whatever you do not spend out of what you earned, you saved. Doesn’t matter if you put it in an account somewhere or it fell out of your pockets and slid under the couch cushions.
Which is why the $3500 per family, wherever that came from, is absurd. Anyone who truly doesn’t have a pot to piss in (according to Bessent, half the population) could only spend $3500 extra by putting it on credit cards. They already save nothing, and can’t save any less than that.
Just the other day I saw where Larry Fink was saying that bitcoin could replace the dollar as the reserve currency. Seemed kinda out of the blue.
The deluded idea out there in some circles is there has to be a reserve currency. But I don’t see any particular logic for one, and certainly not for some crypto-currency. The underpinning of the dollar from 1945 to 1971 was gold, but also that it ran a surplus in manufacturing exports. When that surplus became a deficit in the late ’60s, other countries started trading their surplus dollars for gold and so ultimately Nixon had to go off the gold standard. The new game became selling US debt for real goods and services — but that can only go… Read more »
The bitcoiners been saying Fink is going (pushing things) in that direction for months. Apparently Blackrock is trying to corner a large chunk of Bitcoin and wants to be a market maker (the private sector version of a primary Reserve dealer.)
Move outside the economics box, and there are many routes available that haven’t even been mentioned, much less tried.
‘In the end, Bessent is correct. America cannot continue to create credit in the financial system and borrow trillions to hire government workers.’
Who are those millions of hired ‘government workers’? Empowered females. Cut them out of employment, start them making babies and living under the authority of their husbands and voila! you have a restored, stable, thriving nation.
Hayek told us don’t let the war planners get ahold of the economy.
They did in WWII, with rationing; then, the soldiers came home and went to school on the GI Bill. That is where war planning became the corporate culture of academia and economic theory, as those young soldiers’ formative years were of being in war.
Part of that is that your troops are expendable, which meant Heritage America due to the low immigration rates allowed at the time. This is how Burnham’s Managerial Class formed, as he wrote about it in the still-white 1950s.
All of this is fleeting unless they deal harshly with DOJ and FBI. And DoD has survived unscathed for now. That also needs to change. You did something in your essay that almost nobody else is doing: projecting calm and “we’ve had market corrections before”. Too many people on our side are behaving in a callous manner. Trump called questions about it “stupid” yesterday which was a rare unforced error. The look on his face showed he immediately regretted his choice of words. This is fallout nobody talked about before it happened. So a LOT of investors took a bath… Read more »
And that assumes Congress doesn’t balk at cuts, and that Congress deals with the Judge Problem.
That’s a mighty large assumption. I have a Dad saying about assuming, but …naaah.
The never discussed topic is the big economic event of the year: the $6 plus Trillion of debt that the Treasury has to refinance this year, carrying interest rates of 2-3 %.
The US 10 year was at 4.7% at the start of the year down to about 4.06% today and falling..
The shock in the financial markets has lead to the usual flight to quality : treasuries, the refi will go a lot easier now.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/DGS10
Rational discussion is impossible if “left” and “right” are reduced to synonyms for good and evil. The essence of civility is the acknowledgment that even your enemy may have something to teach you.
ole Joe
It’s always depicted as Good Guys vs. Bad Guys, the cartoonish view of the world.
tho loathe the Left’s comic book “good guys vs bad guys” routine, I can say this: the Leftists are the bad guys! f’em
Our enemies have nothing to teach us about how to organize our nation.
There is no common ground.
Our problem is that we don’t hate them the way that they hate us. We can learn that from them as well as their tactics.
Well now, some of us hate them as much as they hate us…
Some of us even more, @Ostei…
And often that lesson is, “That’s insane. I’m definitely not doing that!”
I was a teacher for a long time, mostly when my kids were 5-18 years old. I always made it a point to observe very strong parents raising respectful, decent, educated, kids. But I learned as much from the people raising rude, spoiled, entitled, morons. From them, I learned what not to do.
Good tie in with last week. The alien oligarchs did not suddenly get a sense of not being alien. The situation is probably catastrophic and very serious and imminent. One problem with an oligarchy made up of people who by their early 20s had some technical skill and/or some talent for pumping and dumping to get rich quick is that they are pretty stupid and have no sense of civilizational thinking. Yet they have tremendous hubris. The situation is strange. The egalitarian utopians went into hyper looting phase and were salivating at the opportunity for racial revenge. Now we have… Read more »
“Let’s hope these reforms prevent collapse …” No. It is not the pattern of ‘capitalism’ that needs to be saved, but our people. Demography is destiny. If we want our genetic and memetic (cultural) patterns to survive, we must have countries of our own again. However one defines “collapse” it must be thorough enough to facilitate pitiless remigration of the numerous parasites amongst us. This is a classic case of the old “perfection is the enemy of the good enough” still NEEDING to be good enough. Any solution that leaves Africans, Muslims, or especially Jews on the inside is simply… Read more »
Hi Horace – I didn’t say it was exclusively the financial system that needs tending to. Thus, my invocation of civilizational thinking. A civilization is unique to and created by a people. I am with you that we need our own homeland to build as we see fit. I do disagree with you on the notion of collapse. A thorough collapse will, most likely, not result in mass remigration/repatriation. If anything, it will lead to more predation and worsening the problem. Yes. We need mass migration, and ultimately we need to restore who belongs and where do they belong. Only… Read more »
First there’s big tax cuts in expectation of vague spending cuts. Then large increases in military spending. Tax cuts made sense in the Kennedy administration with post-war tax rates. They are crazy given today’s debt. Even if the current Congress succeeds in codifying some DOGE cuts, these savings will be dwarfed by tax cuts and higher military spending. Not only will debt not be brought under control, it will likely increase. How is that different than Reaganomics, which is what got us into this mess in the first place?
I was hoping that Trump would take a big hunk out of the DoD but that hope is fading.
Cutting military spending in half was one of the best ideas he’s come up with. We spend more than most of the rest of the world combined; yet are still outproduced by the Russians. Getting out of the arms limitation agreements was supposed to give us a technological edge, but instead has left us in the dust. So, obviously, we need to spend even more to keep our MIC racket going.
Update in the ongoing persecution of the Brimelows and VDare by Letitia James:
https://x.com/vdare/status/1907916184215036179
I wonder if the lefty freaktards would be willing to go back and try the penny plan now.
Scott Bessent was the guy who brought the plan to George Soros on how to bust the Bank of England (according to a trusty source.) This may be correct. It only alludes to this in his Wikipedia bio, doesn’t say he was THE guy but maybe he was. In any event he’s not stupid or crazy. The tariffs have a purpose. It will provide the shock to the system and after everything gets sorted out over the next few months we as a country will be better off. That’s in the medium term. I’m still pessimistic about the long-term but… Read more »
Yeah, I read the other day that he used to work for Soros. Anyone else uneasy that the US economy is in the hands of a former Soros minion who likes dicks in his ass and buys babies away from their mother?
It bothers me that not just one but both of Trump’s treasury secretaries are former business partners of Soros
Trump doesn’t do alternative conceptions of things, e.g., executive qualifications. His hirings are almost uniformly terrible. Other politicians’ are uniformly worse.
He does have old-fashioned feelings about some things, so he behaves unusually in some ways. The system thinks it’s airtight, because it is—almost. Trump’s atavistic presence causes paroxysmal attacks in it and from it, against him and us. Sometimes it injures itself in confusion.
Can we expect better? Not really. He’s the greatest man currently possible. And it’s good to die strangely.
I’d be quite interested to know a thing or three about his bond portfolio.
About 18 years ago – 2007-2009 – the US stock market crashed almost 55%. Because The Lightbringer was installed as President during that time – ending the reign of Bush the Second Evil – the event did not receive the end-of-the-world, utter doomsday treatment that this tiny quiver is getting from the media and the paid commie agitators. Because Trump, of course.
We recovered from the so-called Great Recession. We’ll recover from this minor hiccup as well. Sooner rather than later, I would imagine.
“This set off the Great Trump Stock Market Crash, which promises to continue this week as the rest of the world responds to the new world order.” That’s complete nonsense. The Dow made it’s all-time high on Dec. 4 2024, the NASDAQ on Feb 19 2025, and the S&P on Jan 23 2025. The sell-off was well underway long before Trump announced his liberation day. The longest running joke in financial journalism is that news causes the market to go up and down. The news explanation is always complete nonsense. All my life I’ve been hearing “Dow up—on GOOD inflation… Read more »
“The tariff knob does not go past one hundred.” On the contrary, tarrifs can go to infinity even though the knob’s indicator passes through only a finite number of degrees. It’s an intesting mathematical paradox. At some point however the tariffs can become so high that smugglers will find a niche opening up for them to exploit. Dockworkers and their bosses are rightly notorious for their corruption. Another side effect of sky high tariffs is the panic. If shaped intelligently, millions of criminal aliens may find it less frightening to return home. Why wait for the big, promised collapse to… Read more »
I was up early this morning and I saw Victor David Hanson chiming in. For those who don’t know, he is part of the Hoover Institution. I see him as a moderate, boring, Republican college professor who actually still runs the family farm, so he is intimately familiar with the business side of things. Hands on, which is good. He is not a Trump fan, but he didn’t have very nasty things to say about the tariffs because the farming business gets caught up in the abuses from other countries. I dozed off after the first half hour, so I’m… Read more »
VDH is a great scholar and a typical Boomer conservative. I was once a typical Boomer conservative myself. One can listen to him—if you’ve the time—and not get too angry if you are a fairly mellow conservative. He says what you are thinking. Hence affirmation. Where I criticize him is in his lack of radicalism wrt changing the status quo. My comments to him are often directed to such. He comments on known problems, but never new solutions—mostly old and tried/failed solutions if any. He is best now in his 5-8 minute excerpts from longer discussions on his new YouTube… Read more »
A Bohemian Grove attendee. That says it all.
Good catch.
I have a friend who goes occasionally. He’s famous and gets invites from the son of an old general. Nixon was righter than Alex Jones about it, apparently. He compares it to hanging out at Kid Rock’s fake White House, if you took away the “kegger” qualities of that (but not the drunkenness). A bunch of the same guys are regulars at both places. Reduce all conspiracy theories to accommodate that.
I have come to detest Victor Davis Hanson. This is because I’m a skinflint and refuse to listen to any of the Youtube ads longer than I have to. And I also refuse to buy Youtube’s ad-free subscription. Consequently for almost half a year I endured listening to the opening of some ad showcasing VDH where he says “No Not Gonna Happen” and at that point I was able to hit the Skip button. This phrase No Not Gonna Happen has become firmly embedded in my mind. It’s my own fault for becoming addicted to YT but I think I;m… Read more »
“…and refuse to listen to any of the Youtube ads…”
Just use the Brave browser —- no ads from ytoob.
Seems the problem with YouTube, and I’m assuming since I don’t publish, is that they’ve redone their renumeration algorithm to promote longer videos in order to collect $$$. Hence just about every video is at a minimum 15 minutes, and often now an hour. Even though the content may be adequately imparted in 5-8 minutes. Who the hell has that much time to waste?
Victor David Zionist.
I for one am looking forward to Z-Man’s promised takedown of VDH. Have been getting more and more tired of his meretricious/boomer (take your pic) takes on the state of the world.
The whole Central Valley Raisin Farm Hesiod shtick gets up my nose too. The Hoover is nice work if you can get it.
After graduating from Yale Universityin 1984, Bessent began a career in finance. He was hired by Soros Fund Management, eventually becoming the head of its London office. In this role, he was a leading member of the group that successfully bet on the 1992 sterling crisis, generating over $1 billion in profit for the firm. After he left the Soros Fund, he established his own investment firm, Key Square Group, in 2015.