A U.S. federal court on Wednesday blocked President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs from going into effect, ruling that the president overstepped his authority by imposing across-the-board duties on imports from nations that sell more to the United States than they buy.

    • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      It’s easy to make the mistake of overestimating Trump’s strategy when trying to understand his behavior.

      Since getting elected he just doesn’t give a fuck. He’s got a decade to live at best and he get’s to ride it out in luxury with the entire world as his play thing.

      He got elected by saying he would implement tariffs, gut government services, and be mean to poor people. He’s been doing exactly those things.

      The tariff announcements just stoke angst. Imagine a narcissist being able to fire off a “truth” and the whole world descending in to chaos for a week. That’s it. Like a child poking an ants nest.

    • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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      3 days ago

      We stop exploiting cheap labor in other countries that maintain said labor cheap by giving no protections to their workers. It stops the abhorrent consumerist culture that permeates society, and its ecological implications. And like there are of course, national security concerns that have been exposed with COVID-19.

      • JBar2@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        And tariffs are perfectly legal when they go through the proper channels. So, the administration just needs to go through the proper channels and work with the legislative branch to pass such tariffs. And they shouldn’t be predicated on a bullshit national emergency

        • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          bullshit national emergency

          You mean the President’s feelings being hurt because no one cares about him and they’re starting to tell him that to his face instead of being polite? And starting to actively ignore everything he says and purposely doing the exact opposite of what he wants?

        • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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          Yes I’m sure this would have been the one time the neolib/cons at congress would have acted against their own interests.

          • JBar2@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            Beside the point. You want tariffs? Follow the law, it’s that simple

            To govern within the boundaries of the law, one often needs to build coalitions. Those are guardrails established by democracy

            • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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              3 days ago

              Oh I agree. I just also happen to know that the people who should be imposing this tariffs are the ones with the biggest incentives not to do so, so they won’t do it. Look at all the disgusting things they let him get away with and the one thing that would upended the economic order in ways that would not benefit the elites got stopped.

              I had some hope that this would be the one thing to slip by. Instead they will let him send people to foreign gulags without due process. But nope, don’t touch the billionaires supply chains! That’s no bueno.

      • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Cool, so implement them legally, through Congress. Where they have input from actual economic experts that at least have a minimum understanding of the economy. Not just because someone hurt Trump’s feefees and he reacts like the petulant child he is.

        All the current tariffs will do is kill the actual US-based businesses they’re supposedly supposed to help. Because foreign businesses can just stop selling in the US market and focus elsewhere, the US businesses don’t have that option and instead just have to pay upwards of 140% MORE, in many cases more spent on tariffs than their entire product would sell for. Sudden changes like that just kill businesses.

        US consumers don’t have an extra 150% increase in their paychecks to go along with the price increases from the tariffs. I’d love to more than double my current pay. If that happened, I’d happily pay the increased tariff pricing.

        • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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          3 days ago

          Despite what neoclassical economists will have you believe, many economists do believe Trumps tariffs had solid grounds. The cutting edge of economic thinking is Modern Monetary Policy. And most of the experts I have heard from that school of thought agreed with the tariffs at some level. They mostly disagree with the implementation but they agree that the principles behind them are sound.

          Just know that you cannot in one breath criticize billionaires like Musk and Bezos while defending the global neoliberal order in the other. They are one and the same thing.

          Yes there will be pain, but that pain will come for us sooner or later and I think it better come sooner rather than later when we are in a worst position to recover from it. You can let a leg fester with gangrene or you can cut it off and save the rest of the body.

            • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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              It’s been mostly on podcasts, mainly 1Dime radio which has been having MMT people for a while and I highly recommend. But I believe this blog post by Bill Mitchell, who is one of the main forces behind Modern Monetary Theory enters into the rationale of why he would think the tariffs have a solid foundation:

              https://billmitchell.org/blog/?p=34677

          • ExtantHuman@lemm.ee
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            3 days ago

            Modern monetary policy falls apart when the globe decides to just ignore the US because it’s isolated itself from global trade through idiotic policy.

            No serious economists are claiming this implementation as anything other than absolutely insane.

            • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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              3 days ago

              Sure the implementation is fucked. But the basis of it is not necessarily bad. And I believe that even botched implement would have resulted in long term gains that would have been beneficial.

              Also economic experts are almost exclusively coming from a neoclassical vision, which is incomplete because it disregards the role of money. Modern Monetary Theory simply fixes that limitation and adds a new perspective that is more complete than the neoclassical vision.

              https://docs.google.com/document/d/1gvDcMU_ko1h5TeVjQL8UMJW9gmKY1x0zcqKIRTZQDAQ/mobilebasic

              When the experts of any given field are said that they are incorrect they tend to react with rejection, so it is no surprise that they would reject MMT, as it destroys a lot of what their work has been based on. So don’t just listen to what the experts say, they have incentives to reject revolutionary ideas in their field.

              • ExtantHuman@lemm.ee
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                3 days ago

                You’re acting like “the basis of the concept of a tariff” matters when the tool is used poorly.

                Also, the long term effects of this implementation would not have been beneficial, it would only shrink US trade as it makes itself both irrelevant and an irrational unpredictable partner.

                You really sound like you have the most surface level understanding of what is happening. MMT doesn’t work when you remove your status as the reserve currency by doing this shit.

                • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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                  3 days ago

                  MMT doesn’t rely on being the reserve currency. In fact I think it sometimes argues against it? I’m not an expert on everything MMT yet though, so I can’t speak to that point.

                  But fair point yes, the implementation as not great. That still doesn’t mean that it wouldn’t have had some very good effects for the rest of the world even at the cost of US hegemony. (Since when that became a good thing anyways?)

                  • ExtantHuman@lemm.ee
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                    3 days ago

                    MMT relies upon taking in debt.

                    People have to have trust in the entity taking on the debt to give it the loan. Doing insane shit that causes the global trade to abandon the USD as the reserve currency means waaaaay less entities are willing to loan that money.

                    Which means interest needs to be higher.

                    Which also increases inflation more rapidly.

                    Which breaks the entire concept behind MMT being a useful tool.

      • ExtantHuman@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        Except his tariffs weren’t doing anything to change that dynamic.

        So, in fact, you do not agree with him in tariffs.

        If you want to bring back manufacturing to the US, you didn’t start off your tariff war by increasing the price of every single raw material we need to build those factories and their products. Which is what he did. He had imposed tariffs on steel, wood, aluminum, etc even before his “liberation day” tariff the planet stunt.

        • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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          3 days ago

          It would have been a byproduct of them that I believe he doesn’t give a fuck about, but he has allude to in a few occasions.

          I agree on the second point. The tariffs needed to be wide ranging but somewhat phased. But he can’t do that because he knows he doesn’t have the time, so like everything else he’s doing it with the startup mentality of move fast and break shit. Which I favor in this particular case because I don’t see a neoliberal corpo puppet democrat pushing for tariffs ever.

          • ExtantHuman@lemm.ee
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            3 days ago

            It would NOT have been a byproduct, and I explained why already.

            “Nuh uh” is not a rebuttal.

            He certainly moved fast and broke our economy. That’s not a good thing. Pretending it is shows your nativity.

            • Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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              3 days ago

              It would have been a byproduct I agree, but it’s one that he’s aware about it even if it’s not the goal. I don’t care about his goal, those are always misaligned . I care about what the actual effect is. Again, the breaking of the economy is more of a feature than a bug. I said this already.

              Now I would need to write an essay here to explain why that is a somewhat necessary thing but I won’t. I’ll just say that no paradigm change has happened without pain, so we either accept the pain or we let things hum along and hope that they get better (they wont, the existing structures will only calcify more until change is impossible and collapse ensues)

              I hope the next president gets the vision, but they will inevitably be a neoliberal corporat so, fat chance of that happening.