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The Trump Economy


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12 hours ago, Deranged Rhino said:

 

The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), Title II of Pub.L. 95–223, 91 Stat. 1626, enacted October 28, 1977, is a United States federal law authorizing the president to regulate international commerce after declaring a national emergency in response to any unusual and extraordinary threat to the United States which has its source in whole or substantial part outside the United States.[1]

The H.R. 7738 legislation was passed by the United States 95th congressional session and signed by President Jimmy Carter on December 28, 1977.[2]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Emergency_Economic_Powers_Act

https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/50/1708

 

But you can't do it with a tweet.  :wallbash:

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4 hours ago, LBSeeBallLBGetBall said:

Both things can be true. The media is reporting actual numbers and there is absolutely a cause for concern. The media is also gleefully screaming that the sky is falling in hopes of turning that legitimate concern into full blown panic. You just can't see the latter because of your hatred of Trump.

This is the pot calling the kettle black. 

As I stated a couple of pages ago, both are probably true.  Unfortunately, some can't see the "former" because of their religious belief in Trump...

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2 hours ago, DC Tom said:

 

But you can't do it with a tweet.  :wallbash:

I'm sure yesterday before his carefully measured tweets that tanked the markets he carefully studied the Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 to be on the safe side.

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9 hours ago, plenzmd1 said:

Sooo, let me get this straight

 

on Thursday, this was you stance

 

so, the economy was great, the media was just yapping about a "downturn" to get Trump. And i was told by you and and @Buffalo_Gal that consumer confidence was key to good economy.

 

Today, suddenly, in the midst of the "greatest economy ever"  you have been preparing for a downturn for a long  time now and state it is unavoidable as Trump shatters consumer confidence across the globe. And, yet,according to you, the media is running an influence campaign in reporting the very same facts that you claim to have been preparing for a long time. Good to have it both way I spose!

 

You realize you are Trumps wet dream and are a witness to the 5th avenue shooting no?

 

 

Preparing for a downturn — from record highs. Not a recession. There’s a difference ;)  

 

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18 hours ago, Deranged Rhino said:

 

Preparing for a downturn — from record highs. Not a recession. There’s a difference ;)  

 

well, semantics !!!

 

If you been preparing for a downturn based off record highs..you been preparing for like the last 6 years!!!!

 

Talking with my friend last night and he was thinking shifting some assets to bonds..i was all no way can i time the market...if the market poops the bed nd we get a 20% correction, so be it..but i ain't missing the next upturn

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Has he pulled all our businesses out of China yet? 

 

Republicans have elected a low information person president who Believes the self serving propaganda that is vomited up by right wing nuts. He can still make things a lot worse. Would not surprise me if he just tanks the world economy somehow out of spite. 

 

Hold on, we a temper tantrum or two away from him really f-Ning things up more. Putin must be laughing 

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40 minutes ago, OldTimeAFLGuy said:

 

...Tibs...room to dump his numerous "loads"............mega Depends........

Looks like someone already dumped a ton in Trumps head

-----

 

Wall Street Journal is fed up with Trump's complete incoherence and incompetence: 

 

The Wall Street Journal gave President Donald Trump a stiff word-lashing Friday for ratcheting up his no-win trade war with China.

“The trouble with trade wars, like shooting wars, is that once they start you never know how they’re going to end,” the Journal noted in an editorial scorching Trump. “The enemy gets a vote, and sometimes events escalate in ugly fashion. Take Friday, which saw China retaliate for Donald Trump’s recent tariffs, Mr. Trump blow a gasket, markets tank, and Mr. Trump impose even more tariffs.”

 

The newspaper said Trump then “began tweeting like a bull in a china shop,” and scoffed at his “order” that American companies no longer have anything to do with the world’s second-largest economy.

“Order? Somebody should tell Chairman Trump this isn’t the People’s Republic of America,” the editorial added. U.S. businesses have been trying to shift production out of China to avoid tariffs, “but supply chains that have been developed over decades can’t be uprooted overnight. And no other country has China’s huge relatively skilled workforce, infrastructure and network of suppliers,” the newspaper noted.

The editorial mocked Trump’s “trade-war general” Peter Navarro, and his laughable advice to the stock market that “we’re cool here.” The editors scoffed: “Got that, markets? Just chill, baby.”

 

Instead, the newspaper warned, “markets are wondering if we’re heading toward mutual assured economic destruction.”

In a final dig, the editorial asked: “What was that again about trade wars being easy to win?”

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U.S., Japan agree in principle on trade deal worth 'billions and billions'

Trump highlights benefits for American farmers
 

The U.S. and Japan have agreed in principle on a trade deal worth “billions and billions of dollars,” President Trump said Sunday.
 

Mr. Trump said parties will likely sign the deal around the U.N. General Assembly in September.
 

Japan will buy up America’s corn surplus as part of the deal. Some tariffs on Japanese goods will be removed, though existing levies on autos will remain.
 

“It’s a very big transaction, and we’ve agreed in principle. It’s billions and billions of dollars. Tremendous for the farmers,” Mr. Trump said in an impromptu session with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at the Group of Seven summit in France.
 

</snip>
 

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said Japan is the U.S.’s third-largest agriculture market. He said the deal will open up markets for $7 billion more in U.S. beef, pork, wheat, dairy, wine, ethanol and other products.
 

</snip>

Edited by Buffalo_Gal
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by Don Surber 
 
Posted by earlybird  8/26/2019 9:34:15 AM Post Reply
The Associated Press today engaged in a clickbait that predates the Internet. In it, the reporter makes a statement in the form of a question, then attributes the statement to the interviewed person.
 
The question of President Donald John Trump was, "Mister President, any second thoughts on escalating the trade war with China? The president replied, "Yeah, sure. Why not?"
The reporter asked again, "Second thoughts? Yes?" The president replied, "Might as well, might as well."
Finally, the reporter asked, "You have second thoughts on escalating the trade war with China?" President Trump replied, "I have second thoughts about everything.”
 
(Snip)
 
The Associated Press headline read, "Trump signals some regret on China trade war.
 
:lol:
 
.
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 The Atlantic: Every American Should Hope Trump Prevails Against China. 

 

 

“China’s response to U.S. trade actions appears to reflect a cynicism about the efficacy of democracy. Beijing’s strategy appears calibrated to exploit the fact that the American people elect the head of their government, by attempting to influence how the American people will vote. In effect, it seems to be gambling on its ability to turn American democracy against itself.”

 
 
 
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all of this is trial balloons and negotiating

 

one topic on Fox on the weekend was how this President speaks his mind

 

so we KNOW what he is thinking

 

almost unheard of

 

gives the media a chance to have a hairy spaz over everything he says

 

despite the Depression predicted on Friday, the Dow has been up 200 and bouncing around a bit this morning

 

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1 minute ago, plenzmd1 said:

cough cough..calling @Buffalo_Gal


Here ya go:

</snip>

Each year, the Current Employment Statistics (CES) survey employment estimates are benchmarked to comprehensive counts of employment for the month of March. These counts are derived from state unemployment insurance (UI) tax records that nearly all employers are required to file. For national CES employment series, the annual benchmark revisions over the last 10 years have averaged plus or minus two-tenths of one percent of total nonfarm employment. The preliminary estimate of the benchmark revision indicates a downward adjustment to March 2019 total nonfarm employment of -501,000 (-0.3 percent).

</snip>

Not sure where the 20% in that article came from. That Bureau of Labor Statics graph the story linked to showed that the  government adjusted data showed some of the benchmark revisions were up, some were down.  (I could be reading it wrong, but that was why I quoted that 0.3%.)

 

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18 minutes ago, Buffalo_Gal said:


Here ya go:

</snip>

Each year, the Current Employment Statistics (CES) survey employment estimates are benchmarked to comprehensive counts of employment for the month of March. These counts are derived from state unemployment insurance (UI) tax records that nearly all employers are required to file. For national CES employment series, the annual benchmark revisions over the last 10 years have averaged plus or minus two-tenths of one percent of total nonfarm employment. The preliminary estimate of the benchmark revision indicates a downward adjustment to March 2019 total nonfarm employment of -501,000 (-0.3 percent).

</snip>

Not sure where the 20% in that article came from. That Bureau of Labor Statics graph the story linked to showed that the  government adjusted data showed some of the benchmark revisions were up, some were down.  (I could be reading it wrong, but that was why I quoted that 0.3%.)

 

was just busting on your "number are always revised up under Trump"..?

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