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posted 1 year ago by derjudenjager on scored.co (+0 / -0 / +25Score on mirror )
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ApexVeritas on scored.co
1 year ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 1 child
I'm aware of that aspect, that low interest rates spur spending (economic growth) and depress saving (economic stagnation). However, Trump's policies are tanking the global economy (not necessarily a bad thing), which will lead to weak economies, and since (assuming Trump is being honest) Trump wants to improve the U.S. economy, wouldn't he want lower interest rates to improve the economy?


I'm absolutely fine (and advocate) for U.S. manufacturing to come back to the states, but my main criticism with how Trump is doing it is that it's too much too fast. It's taken us (the globalist jews) years to shift our manufacturing base overseas. It's going to take years to bring back manufacturing, and in the mean time all Trump is doing is just increasing prices on everything, which will exacerbate the problems of rampant inflation we're already seeing, where people can barely afford to eat and pay their bills. And, the next president that comes in can just undo everything Trump does, because most of the manufacturing plants won't be done before Trump's term ends.


Furthermore, the U.S. government operates at insane massive deficits, and that hasn't changed. The government hasn't been run off of taxation for a long while now. Taxation (or tariffs) can't fund the spending of the government. The government is being run off of money printing, usury, and fractional reserve banking. It's fake money from top to bottom. If that isn't fixed, nothing Trump does matters, because we're still going to see banks print infinity money, and we're still going to see inflation. If the economies tank, we'll definitely see less inflation (that we'd normally see otherwise), because reduced spending will reduce money circulation, which will reduce inflation, but we'll still see inflation necessarily because of the money printing.


This is what I don't see an answer to, and why I asked what I did above. It feels like there's something else going on that I can't quite put my finger on, and no one that's argued the pro tariff side (again, I don't necessarily disagree with it) has thus far adequately explained this.


Don't forget that the people in power regularly tank economies so they can destroy their competition (smaller businesses) and buy up assets on the cheap. They did this during Covid, and it was a several trillion dollar wealth transfer from the working poor/middle class to the rich. The laws helped push this, too, as they closed down small businesses while funneling people into larger businesses, which had the government on their side, and had the money to survive the economic downturn.
ValuesLiberty on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
Economic slowdown. Less demand for fuel. Fuel prices go down. Fuel prices is what drives inflation.
ApexVeritas on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
> Fuel prices is what drives inflation.


Fuel prices only partially contribute to inflation, as a cost of doing business, which tariffs will necessarily increase in the short term (next few years, before manufacturing is brought back, if at all).


Inflation is first, and primarily, caused by money printing. The bankers have printed trillions upon trillions of dollars, just in the last few years. We can see the direct result of what money printing and malicious banking has done to our currency. Since the implementation of the Federal Reserve in 1913, the dollar, which used to be mostly stable before that, has lost over 99% of its value. Empires or nations can't withstand that kind of monetary devaluation for very long.
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