The United States(!) of A
I believe Trump has already said he will go to 50% and broaden the scope if there was retaliation.
Game on by the look of it.
I’ve got the popcorn ready. How dumb can Canada be?
contraband flood in the usa imminent, black market Big Maple Syrup and Big Cerveza rubbing their hands together.
e wrote:=flollo
This is ancient economics in modern sense. I lived my whole life at times of increasing globalisation. This will now definitely challenge that process and I’m not sure what the final outcome will be.
It'll be OK Flollo. 1980s childhood was mint, there was not a want of toys or anything like that. There was less than the total abundance of things at the touch of your fingertips & buying instantly from overseas on Temu or Ebay as per today, but there was also less rubbish landfill products. I remember saving 5c coin for a model kit, took weeks. But I appreciated it. It's amazing how solidly made those toys are, still got a few of the diecast model cars.
International travel was still a thing, not so much behind the iron curtain (although Mum visited East Germany in 1964 as part of a tour of Berlin, suppose tourists earned them cash. She remembered the jealousy in the eyes of the shop girl, looking at her dress. Dad also took me across from Hong Kong to the communist side for a village tour in 1985.)
Flying over Russia in 1984 (flight routes went over) I remember looking down at all the towns in the Soviet Union and wondering about the people there, what their life was like - it was just a parallel system.
So life will go on, even if the West and the CRINK nations form opposite blocs.
Oh yeah, andy-mac likes the BRICS, you like the EU, I like the Commonwealth ftw - over 1000 years of compounding law, great individual rights focus... USA to join Commonwealth lol
quadzilla wrote:I dont think its gone, in Trumps administration theres plenty of anti PooMan/Kremlin regime people.Trump is likely to call on the Europeans to increase their support.Some, like Poland/Baltics have done lots.Along with the major Euro countries but the stuff takes it time getting into the practical places.PooMan is relying on half his artillery shells to come from Kim Suk Dik and the hermit kingdom troops are falling like flies.(I'm led to believe 4000 of the 12 are killed or wounded).Economically, interest rates are in the 27-30% range.Caviar will soon be cheaper than potatoes!!!!...I read a report early today that by March it's expected that 60% of car dealers in Russia wont exist.A million young men of fighting age have left Russia for a non war environment.
I think I saw 40thousand U$ to sign up, 2000 a month but the life expectancy for newbys is 8 days according to one report.
All of it is over PooMans ego....Trump wants to pump Oil and get the Saudis to pump so the Russians earn SFA and the economic circumstances get so bad that Russia cant wage war...I'm wondering IF the Kremlin thinking is they will use some of what they haven't?????
UK and France are the military powers of Europe, with nuclear deterrent too. UK is stepping up support to Ukraine. The pump oil to drop price strategy was used in the 1980s to bankrupt the Soviet Union, when added to unaffordable military arms race. Don't think that will work on China though.
velocityjohnno wrote:e wrote:=flollo
This is ancient economics in modern sense. I lived my whole life at times of increasing globalisation. This will now definitely challenge that process and I’m not sure what the final outcome will be.It'll be OK Flollo. 1980s childhood was mint, there was not a want of toys or anything like that. There was less than the total abundance of things at the touch of your fingertips & buying instantly from overseas on Temu or Ebay as per today, but there was also less rubbish landfill products. I remember saving 5c coin for a model kit, took weeks. But I appreciated it. It's amazing how solidly made those toys are, still got a few of the diecast model cars.
International travel was still a thing, not so much behind the iron curtain (although Mum visited East Germany in 1964 as part of a tour of Berlin, suppose tourists earned them cash. She remembered the jealousy in the eyes of the shop girl, looking at her dress. Dad also took me across from Hong Kong to the communist side for a village tour in 1985.)
Flying over Russia in 1984 (flight routes went over) I remember looking down at all the towns in the Soviet Union and wondering about the people there, what their life was like - it was just a parallel system.
So life will go on, even if the West and the CRINK nations form opposite blocs.
Oh yeah, andy-mac likes the BRICS, you like the EU, I like the Commonwealth ftw - over 1000 years of compounding law, great individual rights focus... USA to join Commonwealth lol
Just clarify, not necessarily liking the Brics... Just believe they will be a force over the next half century, but could be totally wrong.
TBH, I really just wish we had a multi polar world abiding by an international rules based off order which all countries respected where the main goal was benefiting humanity with health, wealth and mutual respect.
Thought after cold war it may have been possible, but alas it did not come about.
George Bush put an end to that idea.
Now here we are, war and major economic uncertainty.
Anyway off to listen to a bit of John Lennon....
good stuff Andy-mac, I like what you wish for. There have been many times in history where things have been multi-polar - aka 'great power competition', most of them have had periods of conflict, peaces, and even trade between them.
OK, I'm trying to back off on the news, honest, but Elon got the keys to the payment system:
velocityjohnno wrote:OK, I'm trying to back off on the news, honest, but Elon got the keys to the payment system:
“Officials were instructed” now watch Trump / Musk sack those that did what they were instructed.
And
Watch Trump / Musk sack officials that don’t do what Trump / Musk instruct them to do irrespective of illegalities.
You can’t make this stuff up.
velocityjohnno wrote:OK, I'm trying to back off on the news, honest, but Elon got the keys to the payment system:
This is great. The smartest businessman in the world should be running this.
Sack any corrupt worker, drain the swamp.
Haha, sounds familiar. Happens in corporate a lot as well. Probably more than people think. Very little gets rejected.
Supafreak wrote:What’s Trumps next move ? Raise his tariffs even higher ? https://www.instagram.com/reel/DFjcjyrPVWT/?igsh=cGw5dHA2N25lcG9o
my gawwwds he's a wanker...
mustn't be easy to get up there, when you essentially have no support from the people, but his presentation style is beyond nauseating
anyway, good luck trudes... pretty sure you need the US more than they need you...
and, vj's right, it wasn't so bad when we weren't so spoilt for choice... and that spoilt for choice comes as an incredible environmental cost...
my guess is trump will exclude the oil and gas etc. until he makes the US energy independent again
then he can tariff the fuck out that as well
canadians definitely gonna feel it more than US, in the mid term anyway...
Trump finds inspiration in president William McKinley. So much so that one of the first things he did was to rename Denali to Mt McKinley again. McKinley, like Trump, was a protectionist president. He also expanded the US territory to Guam, Puerto Rico and Hawaii. Cuba and the Phillipines were liberated from Spain through American-Spanish war.
Also, McKinley started discussion about Panama Canal. He was a tariff president who promised protection for American business and well-paid U.S. factory workers. His era was marked by significant economic growth. Federal income taxes were introduced after his time, in 1913. Before then, tariffs were the main source of government revenue.
Does any of this sound familiar? It’s a weird situation, some of these policies would make unions ecstatic. But it’s coming from Trump!?
One thing worth mentioning is that McKinley got assassinated. These policies will put a huge target on Trump’s back. I reckon the enemies have way more power than he does.
Trump’s having a busy week , ISIS this time , who’s next ? Mexican cartels look out, you're on his radar . https://apnews.com/article/somalia-islamic-state-trump-airstrikes-hegset...
Yeah its hard to keep up.
&t=418s
flollo wrote:Trump finds inspiration in president William McKinley. So much so that one of the first things he did was to rename Denali to Mt McKinley again. McKinley, like Trump, was a protectionist president. He also expanded the US territory to Guam, Puerto Rico and Hawaii. Cuba and the Phillipines were liberated from Spain through American-Spanish war.
Also, McKinley started discussion about Panama Canal. He was a tariff president who promised protection for American business and well-paid U.S. factory workers. His era was marked by significant economic growth. Federal income taxes were introduced after his time, in 1913. Before then, tariffs were the main source of government revenue.
Does any of this sound familiar? It’s a weird situation, some of these policies would make unions ecstatic. But it’s coming from Trump!?
One thing worth mentioning is that McKinley got assassinated. These policies will put a huge target on Trump’s back. I reckon the enemies have way more power than he does.
I remember an economist saying... 'any economic change brings about opportunities'
it just comes down to who are the winners and losers...
and how sustainable that change proves to be
maybe, just maybe... trump can create high paying working class jobs again (relatively)
and maybe even all the fruit pickers can earn a decent wage?
(arguments against trump policies that justify illegal slave labour are just evidence of how messed up things have become)
yep, there may be a shortage of suitable workers...
but apparently there's also a fresh batch of the newly unemployed... from government offices, programs and dei...
plenty of work in LA I hear...
'learn to code'
just became...
'learn to hammer'
indo-dreaming wrote:Yeah its hard to keep up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6qSNZZu0OQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUVaBptzBp8&t=418s
I persevered indo & managed to watch the cartel video . The advertising nearly had me switching off , overall though , there was some interesting information & discussion of different tactics and potential outcomes . . It’s a huge mission that will be expensive and long , will it be worth it ? You would think so , but it would depend on the carnage that will occur to achieve eradication of the cartels completely. I watched a short clip on Joe Rogan and the guy getting interviewed said if special forces are sent in then the cartels should bank their money and retire , or words to that effect .
burleigh wrote:velocityjohnno wrote:OK, I'm trying to back off on the news, honest, but Elon got the keys to the payment system:
This is great. The smartest businessman in the world should be running this.
Sack any corrupt worker, drain the swamp.
Great idea, let the richest man in the world into the government financial system’s. Musk is no saviour he’s there for the power and the money.
Distracted wrote:burleigh wrote:velocityjohnno wrote:OK, I'm trying to back off on the news, honest, but Elon got the keys to the payment system:
This is great. The smartest businessman in the world should be running this.
Sack any corrupt worker, drain the swamp.
Great idea, let the richest man in the world into the government financial system’s. Musk is no saviour he’s there for the power and the money.
I wonder if he will introduce a Mars tax .
andy-mac wrote:velocityjohnno wrote:e wrote:=flollo
This is ancient economics in modern sense. I lived my whole life at times of increasing globalisation. This will now definitely challenge that process and I’m not sure what the final outcome will be.It'll be OK Flollo. 1980s childhood was mint, there was not a want of toys or anything like that. There was less than the total abundance of things at the touch of your fingertips & buying instantly from overseas on Temu or Ebay as per today, but there was also less rubbish landfill products. I remember saving 5c coin for a model kit, took weeks. But I appreciated it. It's amazing how solidly made those toys are, still got a few of the diecast model cars.
International travel was still a thing, not so much behind the iron curtain (although Mum visited East Germany in 1964 as part of a tour of Berlin, suppose tourists earned them cash. She remembered the jealousy in the eyes of the shop girl, looking at her dress. Dad also took me across from Hong Kong to the communist side for a village tour in 1985.)
Flying over Russia in 1984 (flight routes went over) I remember looking down at all the towns in the Soviet Union and wondering about the people there, what their life was like - it was just a parallel system.
So life will go on, even if the West and the CRINK nations form opposite blocs.
Oh yeah, andy-mac likes the BRICS, you like the EU, I like the Commonwealth ftw - over 1000 years of compounding law, great individual rights focus... USA to join Commonwealth lol
Just clarify, not necessarily liking the Brics... Just believe they will be a force over the next half century, but could be totally wrong.
TBH, I really just wish we had a multi polar world abiding by an international rules based off order which all countries respected where the main goal was benefiting humanity with health, wealth and mutual respect.
Thought after cold war it may have been possible, but alas it did not come about.
George Bush put an end to that idea.
Now here we are, war and major economic uncertainty.Anyway off to listen to a bit of John Lennon....
Great call @andymac and makes one ponder why it aint so.
The first thing that comes to mind is that culture is so engrained and embodied in different populations,and theres' such a vast chasm in distance and connection between different cultures....ultimately it seems it's human nature to look for the negative first of a culture instead of the positives.
As a very rough example, personally, i don't see China the way it's portrayed here and in the media. Probably because of my past interactions with Chinese peoplee. I see China as Tai Chi, herbal medicine, Kung Fu, philosophy, traditional medicine and a culture of exploration and curiosity. What China represents as a 'nation' in 2025 is not what i view China as in my own experiences, yet we're sold that picture, to represent all Chinese people.
Anyway, point being, it's perspective, and with the internet being so accesible now for the worlds populations, it's a constant feed of division, negative reinforcement (i.e Facebook and instagram etc are designed specifically to make you feel shit about something, and at odds with your fellow humans, hence you feel the need for a response....a classic form of negative reinforcement) which is continually feeding this growing wave of resentment to anyone that's not exactly like us.
I see the internet as an age, just like the Ice age, the Industrial revolution etc. The introduction of the internet is a clear distinct line in human and world history.
I really hope the next line is the end of the internet. I think it would be the best thing for all of humanity if the thing just imploded under a cacophony of scammers, hackers and trolls, a big burning mess that can never be recovered. Back to sticks and dirt, although it'll suck for surf comps and swellnet, and sorry to the SN team for being out of a job. But still reckon it'll be the best thing that ever happens in our lifetime. I think it will happen. It's too fickle with it's reliance on humans to function efficiently. Someone will fuck it all up.
Septic Tanks are going to Septic Tank