Big Dummy Trump says he'll impose a 200% tariff on John Deere for moving some
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Tiger Titan [47977]
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Big Dummy Trump says he'll impose a 200% tariff on John Deere for moving some
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Sep 24, 2024, 3:15 PM
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jobs and production to Mexico.
How could ANYONE think this is a good thing?
Hurting an American company? Check. Raising prices for Americans? Check.
All ya'll MF's touting DJT's economic policies...I'd love to hear some type of defense of this type of action.
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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Limited government, free market master.***
Sep 24, 2024, 3:21 PM
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Game Day Hero [4224]
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Re: Big Dummy Trump says he'll impose a 200% tariff on John Deere for moving some
Sep 24, 2024, 3:23 PM
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Overpriced green needs no help in raising prices. That much I do know.
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Campus Hero [13362]
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They wont be able to raise the prices that much, so theyll have to eat the
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Sep 24, 2024, 3:31 PM
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Difference… or just not ship jobs overseas
It isn’t free market, but then we don’t live in a free country with a free market.
I’d much prefer tariffs to the income tax, and we know camela and Joe love tariffs because they kept Trump’s
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Tiger Titan [47977]
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Those tariffs will 100% be paid for by JD consumers. Who in the actual F
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Sep 24, 2024, 4:31 PM
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is DJT to try and penalize an American company that operates on a global scale for shifting jobs from one country to another?
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Heisman Winner [85447]
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I like angry Tom.***
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Sep 24, 2024, 4:35 PM
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Campus Hero [13362]
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Prices are always paid by the consumer. JD has competition these days
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Sep 24, 2024, 4:41 PM
[ in reply to Those tariffs will 100% be paid for by JD consumers. Who in the actual F ] |
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and so they are either going to have to a) eat the tariff (not raise their price) or b) raise their price and sell less tractors, or c) not ship jobs overseas in the first place.
Consumers are going to pay the same price, or perhaps a slightly higher price, but nowhere near the same markup as the Tariff. That's the whole point: you eat away at the corporation's profit margin to punish them for taking jobs from Americans.
Again: not free market, but we don't live in a free country.
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Tiger Titan [47977]
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or d) not vote for dickheadtrump.
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Sep 24, 2024, 5:05 PM
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How are you going to punish a company for taking away the jobs that THEY created? Think about just how F'ing stupid that is.
Oh, and it's like 600 jobs. Not 5000 jobs or 20,000 jobs. Nope, 600. So approximately 2 Buc-ee's locations worth.
And no, that's not how this works. JD wouldn't just let Trump shove a tariff in theirass. They would, without question, pass that straight back to the consumer. Full stop.
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Campus Hero [13362]
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yes vote to kill the American people with the steady creep of globalist policies
Sep 24, 2024, 8:56 PM
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great job
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Tiger Titan [47977]
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yes vote to kill the American people with the steady creep of nationalist
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Sep 25, 2024, 8:46 AM
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policies.
Fixed it for you.
Raising prices for Americans out of sheer spite is terrible policy. Period.
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Oculus Spirit [41697]
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You guys must have loved NAFTA***
Sep 26, 2024, 3:16 PM
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Ultimate Tiger [33730]
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So you support federal involvement in the markets and to....
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Sep 25, 2024, 2:43 PM
[ in reply to Prices are always paid by the consumer. JD has competition these days ] |
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punish companies for making certain moves.
You support the federal government putting tariffs on specific company's imports?
What about existing equipment being built in say...Brazil...sold into the US that aren't pay tariffs now?
It's laughable you toss around the communist and socialist label like free candy...and yet you would support something like this.
Such a shining example that you don't really have any specific ideology...just a pretty blind support of Trump, or whoever else is saying dumb stuff at the moment going against the "norm".
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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Tom: "You can't trust the evil federal government!"
Sep 25, 2024, 2:47 PM
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"They caused 9/11 and they're forcing us into communism!...
Well, except, I guess you can trust them to meddle in our economy and the things that really matter in our every day lives. I'm cool with that. I think."
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Ultimate Tiger [33730]
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All-American [560]
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Re: They wont be able to raise the prices that much, so theyll have to eat the
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Sep 24, 2024, 11:36 PM
[ in reply to They wont be able to raise the prices that much, so theyll have to eat the ] |
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Difference… or just not ship jobs overseas
It isn’t free market, but then we don’t live in a free country with a free market.
I’d much prefer tariffs to the income tax, and we know camela and Joe love tariffs because they kept Trump’s
You, sir, need a lesson in economics. Tariffs will not be paid by foreign governments or foreign companies. Tariffs will raise the price of goods shipped from another country. The US person, or company in the US, will pay the higher cost of the goods if they buy the goods. That's money out of your pocket.
Normally, a country only applies tariffs on products to help mfrs within their country to compete with goods shipped from other countries. In the long run, tariffs may increase mfrg in the country that added the tariff. But in the first 2 years, all of the cost of the tariff will be paid by US consumers (that is, you and me).
TheRump screwed the US farmers, and US consumers, around 2017, when he applied tariffs to products from China. The US farmers had been selling $3-4 Billion dollars of soybeans to China each year. This also reduced the cost of US soybeans sold in the US for animal feed and soy food products in the US. After TheRump added tariffs on the China goods, the Chinese govt added tariffs on US soybeans, and the Chinese then bought $3-4 Billion dollars worth of soybeans from Brazil -- and still buy their soybeans there. Meanwhile, lots of smaller US farmers went bankrupt. TheRump, after 6 months of farmers' complaints, gave the bigger US farm companies $3-4 Billion dollars, for a few years, to reduce the number of bankruptcies. That was your money he gave them, increasing the national debt. This waste was on top of his taxcut for billionaires that skyrocketed the national debt. All the GOPers are complaining about Biden's increase in the national debt, but it has been less than half of Trump's increase in the national debt.
Did you know that TheRump collected $320 Million from small givers, like you, in his "STOP THE STEAL" beg. Did you know, they spent less than $100 Million on lawyers and expenses? Ever wonder what happened to the remainder? TheRump put it in his bank accts overseas. He's a crook and you're a cult member.
Soon, he may be your dictator. Then he won't need your vote or to beg for your money. Dictators take what they want. He will cut Social Security and Healthcare. He will cut military spending as he will allow Putin and China to do what they want. (First he will abandon NATO.) Eventually, with no NATO, China and Russia will, then, take over the US. And Putin will laugh as he executes TheRump, while TheRump wonders how Putin tricked him.
And your grandchildren will curse you every day, as they get poorer and poorer and the dictators get richer.
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Campus Hero [13362]
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So much hatred and ignorance.
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Sep 24, 2024, 11:41 PM
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When the US applies a tariff, the price doesn't just go up by the amount of the tariff. If it did, the producer would not be able to sell any of their product. So they have to compete on price, and they end up having less margin, by a lot, than they did before. Yes the consumer pays - they always pay, no matter what. Duh.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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I don't think you understand how any of this, or economics, works.***
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Sep 25, 2024, 1:04 PM
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Campus Hero [13362]
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OK, explain how the company will keep their price the same after a tariff.
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Sep 25, 2024, 2:37 PM
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Which has never happened before. (They always have to lower the price to offset the tariff) .
If I'm so wrong, please point to a product who's price went up by the amount of the tariff after imposition.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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Just one? LOL
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Sep 25, 2024, 3:09 PM
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For instance, Ford and General Motors both faced more than $1 billion in higher costs from steel and aluminum tariffs in 2018, or about $700 per vehicle produced in North America, and warned that they might be forced to pass on these higher costs to consumers via price increases on their vehicles.
You, too, need to read this. And it's absurd that you rant about not trusting the government yet want to hand them this much power over our lives.
https://www.cato.org/publications/separating-tariff-facts-tariff-fictions#introduction
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Campus Hero [13362]
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That doesn't prove that they didn't lower their price.
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Sep 25, 2024, 6:34 PM
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Original price for widget is $100 New Tariff is set at 100% If they don't change the original price, the new price to the consumer is $200
Show me one example where that happened.
Obviously their price will increase somewhat, but they will still have to compete against other providers, so they can't increase it by the amount of the tariff. That is what I said, now prove that wrong.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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I already did with that link, which you are avoiding reading
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Sep 25, 2024, 8:00 PM
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Prove your claims right. That’s how it works.
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Gridiron Giant [16097]
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America first***
Sep 24, 2024, 6:19 PM
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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Lib***
Sep 24, 2024, 6:20 PM
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All-American [560]
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Re: America first***
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Sep 24, 2024, 11:51 PM
[ in reply to America first*** ] |
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I think you meant to say: "Trump, the dictator, FIRST."
As he cuts Healthcare and Social Security, and puts that money in his pocket. Then he will let BIG OIL charge what they want (and pollute), and the prices of fuel and food will go crazy-high. (BIGOIL's record profits, on top of higher than needed fuel costs, were the main reason for inflation in Biden's term.) BIGOIL does not want electric cars, so they caused inflation to make people want TheRump back in the Whitehouse. Most MAGAites are too slow to figure that out.
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Clemson Icon [26663]
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^^^ Which universe did this one float in from...? ^^^***
Sep 26, 2024, 11:32 PM
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Orange Phenom [14165]
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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Do you like free markets or the heavy hand of government intervention to do
Sep 24, 2024, 9:35 PM
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"what's best"?
Populists want it both ways.
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Heisman Winner [86416]
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I know people like to use NAFTA and GATT as giant
Sep 25, 2024, 7:57 AM
[ in reply to But is Trump as big a dummy as George Bush and Bill Clinton?? ] |
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whipping boys after the fact, and they did hurt certain industries, textiles for one, but they helped the auto industry, retail, agriculture, and technology, and contributed to the great economy in the 90s with an exploding stock market with virtually no inflation.
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Orange Phenom [14165]
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That little thing called the "Internet" had more to do with the 90's boom than
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Sep 25, 2024, 8:22 AM
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anything else.
I live in one of those former small Southern textile towns that the NAFTA deals killed. I've driven through many more and yet all those replacement "learn to code" jobs in small town America never materialized. I wonder why....
No... for a long time both political party's (dare I call it the DC "Uniparty") worshiped so diligently upon the alter of "Free Trade" (as opposed to "Fair Trade") that they willingly allowed the destruction of whole parts of America - mostly small town America manufacturing. They were willing to throw away whole communities and the many problems that came along with it for cheap labor made c.rap from outside our borders.
It's not just the destruction of American communities but some very real National Security risks we ignored with the DC establishments worship of Free Trade. Some see that now and as a result want to bring back a lot of our manufacturing capabilities. There is simply no painless way to bring that manufacturing back - it's going to cost us one way or another (inflation, higher prices etc...) but that is the price we are going to have to pay if we want manufacturing back in the USA. I for one am willing to pay it because the ultimate outcome is better for the USA in many more ways than the increased price I pay for an item at the store.
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Heisman Winner [86416]
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But I still think free trade helped more communities
Sep 25, 2024, 8:38 AM
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than it hurt, and you're right it decimated textiles, but the biggest plus was virtually no inflation.
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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It's weird arguing for free trade against ostensive conservatives.***
Sep 25, 2024, 10:03 AM
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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We need fair trade, not free trade. We cannot complete with slave labor.***
Sep 25, 2024, 10:33 AM
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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Why would we need to compete with it?***
Sep 25, 2024, 10:37 AM
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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Well our economy doesn't run on magic, we have to have jobs stateside unless
Sep 25, 2024, 10:51 AM
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you think the federal govt. can just employ everybody. This isn't limited to manufacturing production jobs anymore, I see a lot of my customers moving purchasing, engineering, tool building, etc. to India and Mexico, as well.
Maybe if we reduced regulations, the entire federal govt. workforce, and taxes buy 75-80% we could get by with lower wages and be more competitive globally.
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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*Looks around at everything post-NAFTA*
Sep 25, 2024, 10:54 AM
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Things seem to be going pretty well.
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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Well govt. is the #1 employer in the country and half of the population is
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Sep 25, 2024, 11:17 AM
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on govt. benefits, so I'm sure that masks problems to a certain degree. We'll see how long that is sustainable. IMO the white collar folks are on the cusp of getting the kind of shock blue collar workers got a few decades back based on some of the trends I'm seeing in my industry. Anyone in IT knows how it goes, now the crosshairs are on engineers, office workers, etc.
The EU is slapping tariffs on Chinese EV's for a reason, they know what will happen. Especially considering Western govts. obsession with forcing EV's on the population at all costs. Which is a whole other, related problem.
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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I'm sure horse cart makers were once terrified.
Sep 25, 2024, 11:19 AM
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Economies evolve. I'm in a field at risk of being AI'd or outsourced. When that happens, I'll move to something else. Or learn a new skill. I won't petition my Congressman to intervene with new regulations.
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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I'm sure we can all be baristas and come out OK.***
Sep 25, 2024, 11:29 AM
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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We'll be fine, LB.***
Sep 25, 2024, 11:35 AM
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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We probably will be, our kids are a different story
Sep 25, 2024, 12:15 PM
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We don't remain a super power unless we build things, and have people who know how to build things.
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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What's the takeaway supposed to be here?
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Sep 25, 2024, 2:35 PM
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Mine is that tariffs on China actually did cause companies to move production, albeit to Vietnam and other places. Now, what if we took that concept and incentivized them to move production back here?!
FWIW we saw quite a bit of small part manufacturing move back stateside after the tariffs, but I don't do anything in the furniture industry.
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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The takeaway is that economies evolve.
Sep 25, 2024, 2:42 PM
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The jobs those people lost were replaced with new jobs; better paying and less labor intensive. The people who were going to go into furniture went to college instead.
I am 100% on board with incentivizing businesses to move back. Less taxes. Less regs. Less government intervention. Even now companies are coming home because counting on foreign countries, especially ones with unpredictable governments, is a risky move. Others because supply chain expensive have made offshoring less profitable.
But your fear of economic change is pushing you into the "more government" camp. That's not a good idea.
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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No they weren't the towns largely died
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Sep 25, 2024, 2:48 PM
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And now the people who went to college are facing the same problem those folks faced, which is what I've tried to articulate here.
I 100% agree with less taxes, regulation, and govt. intervention. But I don't necessarily have a problem using tariffs to level the playing field, either. Particularly considering we can only do so much to complete with actual slave labor.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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What we need to do is spread large concentrations in D.C. to other states.
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Sep 25, 2024, 12:26 PM
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We may already do this in many cases (especially military), but I'd shed no tears if we gutted D.C.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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Yet tariffs are not the answer
Sep 25, 2024, 12:38 PM
[ in reply to We need fair trade, not free trade. We cannot complete with slave labor.*** ] |
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In fact, they tend to decrease output and productivity. It can increase unemployment. The American people eat the costs, and American manufacturers will cut quality for costs. People involved in the supply line from truck drivers to those in the ports will hurt as well.
We ate the costs of Trump's misguided tariffs before, and it helped take us on this march toward inflation.
SC's largest employer is the Port system. Do you know what happens to those jobs if we start levying heavy tariffs? Do you know how bad that would devastate our state? And if China isn't sending them here, they'll gladly set it up with other nations. Maybe South American ones that Trump abandoned.
Pretty much all economists say tariffs are a terrible idea to stimulate an economy. What they ARE good for is rallying shortsighted nationalism and jingoism. "Yay Trump and USA! #### China!"
Except, those aren't really reasons to do this.
I don't get while y'all are so behind these tariffs when the data, analysis, and history say it's a terrible idea. You know, y'all don't have to agree with Trump on everything... right? You really haven't given any valid reasons or evidence to support why we need them.
Here's a better explanation from Cato--far from a liberal source.
https://www.cato.org/publications/separating-tariff-facts-tariff-fictions#introduction
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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Stimulating the economy isn't the be all end all, we need a robust economy
Sep 25, 2024, 1:13 PM
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that makes things, with people who know how to make them. That's how we stay top dog. Everyone uses tariffs to some degree, it's a game that must be played to incentivize companies to keep production in house, so to speak.
We export tons of cars, I don't think South Carolina ports are going to be in any trouble due to these tariffs he's talking about. And I'm not even saying I agree 100% with his proposal, but I do agree we must level the playing field somehow to stay competitive. I've outlined why pretty explicitly in this thread, if you think it's just me supporting Trump for the sake of supporting Trump I'd say you probably haven't read what I've posted.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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Did you read the link?
Sep 25, 2024, 1:20 PM
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Because it lays in very good detail why you're wrong, and it's written by an economist who does this for a living.
We export tons of cars, I don't think South Carolina ports are going to be in any trouble due to these tariffs he's talking about.
Errrr, what? Most of that work at the ports is unloading ships, not loading them. You think we're just going to be okay there if we take a major reduction in imports? That equals lay offs. One of the beauties of our port system in SC is that it hires a LOT of people who have only a high school diploma. Name another employer in this state that offers such opportunities when it comes to salary and benefits.
Please look at all the problems the Cato Institute lays out with tariffs and explain how they're worth your end game, which is vague. Sorry, man, but any economic expert is going to tell you that tariffs do not arrive at what you want to accomplish.
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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I haven't read the CATO link, no. I'm going off of what I see in industry in
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Sep 25, 2024, 2:27 PM
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real life, and if the trend continues younger generations are going to have a real problem. Even the highly educated ones. This isn't like the 1900's or even 1980's when we had big time technological and competency advantages in most industries. We have an education system that is not preparing US kids for industry, while we are simultaneously not competitive with labor due to the ease of offshoring and hiring of foreigners. That is not a recipe for success, if you're 45-50+ years old you're probably OK...If you have kids, it's something to be concerned about on their behalf.
We are a top exporter of automotive cars and components, with aerospace and white goods coming in 2nd and 3rd. Many of those products are produced in South Carolina, generating both jobs and revenue for our local economies. That is much more meaningful than jobs to handle imports.
That's not even getting into the national security ramifications....A plant making skid steers can pretty readily be converted into making tanks or other equipment.
This 1990's view of free trade has only hollowed out our middle class, my end game is not vague at all. We need a robust economy that produces things and people who know how to produce things. Without that, we're not going to stay on top. We've got to quit looking at only short term economic stimulation and be more focused on long term stability. Why do you think the EU is putting tariffs on Chinese EV's? Because they know many of their automakers are F'ed if cheap EV's produced with slave labor get a foothold, and that's not good for anyone.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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Economic rules don't change over the decades
Sep 25, 2024, 3:05 PM
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We're looking at simple macro economics here. An excerpt from the link I gave you:
This is not, however, the end of the story. Consumers and other businesses forced to pay tariffs or buy higher-priced domestic goods suffer from lower incomes and profits than they would have without the tariffs. This, in turn, means reduced consumer spending on other goods and services or, for companies, on worker salaries or investments. Tariffs can also lead to increased currency values, placing exporters at a disadvantage in foreign markets and thus reducing their sales and profits. Like any tax, a tariff generally leads to deadweight loss (an excess loss or burden above the amount actually paid in tax) because it decreases aggregate economic activity and incomes.
Finally, tariffs’ protectionist objectives and revenue objectives are often in tension because tariffs are only paid (and thus collected) on imports that enter the country. Raise tariffs high enough to reduce or eliminate imports (and thus benefit higher-priced domestic producers), and tariff revenue also is reduced or eliminated. Keeping tariffs low can maintain import levels and thus generate revenue but result in little protection for domestic firms. In fact, revenue considerations once limited the scope and magnitude of US tariffs (and thus of US protectionism).
And if you decrease supply while the demand remains the same, prices will skyrocket. Salaries aren't keeping up with costs already. It will be economic disaster.
The steel and aluminum tariffs of 2018 are just a microcosm of how they don't work.
We are a top exporter of automotive cars and components, with aerospace and white goods coming in 2nd and 3rd. Many of those products are produced in South Carolina, generating both jobs and revenue for our local economies. That is much more meaningful than jobs to handle imports.
You aren't getting this. This won't increase on our end and may decrease as well since the foreign companies are shipping parts in here to make cars (like BMW and Volvo) that will be subjected to tariffs. On the export end, volume will decrease. This will lead to layoffs at the ports. Period.
From Cato:
Empirical research from David Furceri and others examined 151 countries from 1963 through 2014 and found that tariff increases lead to economically and statistically significant declines in domestic output and productivity, as well as increases in unemployment and inequality.
You said, "We need a robust economy that produces things and people who know how to produce things."
I'm throwing all this evidence at you--evidence that economists across the globe will support--that shows you your end game won't happen. You haven't been able to cite any statistics that support what you want, and when I show you the evidence, you're ignoring it and just going with, "well, I'm just gonna stick to anecdotal evidence."
Finally, one last thing Cato notes:
Tariffs also beget retaliatory actions from foreign countries, creating the potential for offsetting government aid. And it all creates an environment ripe for corruption and geopolitical tension.
The 2018–2019 tariffs are again instructive here. First, there was the inevitable retaliation. Governments of China, the European Union, Canada, and Mexico, as well as nations with smaller levels of trade with the United States, quickly responded with tariffs on American products. Research shows, moreover, that the retaliatory tariffs were politically motivated, targeting products that would disproportionately impact counties that supported Donald Trump in the 2016 election.
Read that last line again. That's talking about places like South Carolina.
Tariffs are bad. Period. There is no other counter argument. Not one person here has been able to cite data that supports the use of tariffs, both long term and short term.
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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I honestly don't think you even understand my concerns, you're
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Sep 26, 2024, 12:46 PM
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just using a CATO institute study to bash me over the head with. Just curious, what is your experience dealing with international businesses?
I don't care about layoffs at the Ports, as we've seen in the past, tariffs do alter businesses behavior. Volvo, BMW, and a lot of those manufacturers have increased their reliance on more local part suppliers over the past decade. Spartanburg, in particular, has benefitted from this hugely. I don't care what your CATO institute study says, I've worked in the industry for 15 years.
A study from 151 countries does not prove my end game won't happen, because when you're the big d!ck things work a little different when you make moves. Companies are not going to respond to US tariffs the same as they would for a country like Czech Republic, for instance.
"Read that last line again. That's talking about places like South Carolina.
This is also hilarious, considering the huge increase in manufacturing we've seen coming to the state the past 8 years. If they were talking about places like South Carolina, they must of missed the memo or something.
Again, as I have repeatedly said, I don't think tariffs are the be all end all solution...but they can absolutely be used to level the playing field for US manufacturers.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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For the love of sweet baby Jesus, read the ####### report
Sep 26, 2024, 1:25 PM
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I've given you a sound counter argument--not out of my mouth, but out of an expert's--on this and you're refusing to read it AND you're misinterpreting the quotes.
I don't care about layoffs at the Ports, as we've seen in the past, tariffs do alter businesses behavior. Volvo, BMW, and a lot of those manufacturers have increased their reliance on more local part suppliers over the past decade. Spartanburg, in particular, has benefitted from this hugely. I don't care what your CATO institute study says, I've worked in the industry for 15 years.
You should care. Again, they're the state's largest employer. If you can't see how that's an issue, I don't know how to help you here.
EDIT: Another reason you should care about what happens at the Ports. If you enjoy much of the lifestyle and benefits of where you live, you should thank the Ports, because I promise they're funding a lot of it.
It's a FACT that BMW ships parts in from overseas, and those parts would be subject to tariffs. Great. You work in whatever industry; I won't lecture you on that (as you've somehow tried to do with journalism and me in the past when you have no experience there). While that may make them turn to more local parts, that is still going to raise prices and still going to hinder production. What I'm presenting to you, through the arguments of experts, is that tariffs are bad on a simple macro economic level, yet you're refusing to even entertain reading it. That makes you look very foolish here.
It's simple: Lower supply, demand doesn't change, costs go up for the consumer. That's what happens with tariffs.
Show me ONE, just ONE expert study that counters what I gave you and says these tariffs are a good idea.
A study from 151 countries does not prove my end game won't happen, because when you're the big d!ck things work a little different when you make moves. Companies are not going to respond to US tariffs the same as they would for a country like Czech Republic, for instance.
The studies of 151 countries and the study of economic history in the past and real historical examples doesn't prove that the great Lakebum has somehow figured it all out! Good Christ, man.
This is also hilarious, considering the huge increase in manufacturing we've seen coming to the state the past 8 years. If they were talking about places like South Carolina, they must of missed the memo or something.
Please re-read the excerpt again. It says that retaliatory tariffs (and they'll happen) will target counties that were pro-Trump in the election. They proved that those nations targeted them. That's SC, bruh. That's Spartanburg.
Again, as I have repeatedly said, I don't think tariffs are the be all end all solution...but they can absolutely be used to level the playing field for US manufacturers.
No, they cannot, and I have given you hard factual evidence otherwise. You've failed to do the same with a counterpoint. It's all anecdotal, and not even applicable at that.
Message was edited by: Catahoula®
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Clemson Icon [26663]
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READ the UNI-PARTY memorandum!!! ... CATO ... What a sold-out joke.***
Sep 26, 2024, 11:47 PM
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Tiger Titan [47977]
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Good morning. You are probably aware that the concept of
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Sep 25, 2024, 10:12 AM
[ in reply to But is Trump as big a dummy as George Bush and Bill Clinton?? ] |
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sending jobs to different countries in effort to diversify labor, save labor costs, and in some cases pick more sensible locations for distribution and supplier logistics has been going on for.....many decades? Some have even gone the way of "smartshoring" while bringing jobs back.
Sure, NO ONE wants to lose a job. 600 isn't exactly some whopping amount though. And to what lengths do you suggest we go? Save 600 jobs at the expense of lord only knows how many consumers/farmers having to pay more for products?
I mean, why don't we just punish ANY company with a US HQ that decides to do business in other countries?
Heck, even the pot (Trump) that's calling this kettle (overseas jobs) black has his name on 10+ hotels in non US countries. He should impose penalties on his OWN properties in the USA. RIGHT?
And yes, F Trump. Sideways. No political tribalism here. F the one guy, the guy named Trump. Hesucks.
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Heisman Winner [81033]
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There are probably at least 600 more people who support that plant
Sep 25, 2024, 10:46 AM
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Many companies probably had a dedicated guy servicing the plant, now their volumes go down, so prices for other customers have to go up. This is on a different scale, of course, but imagine if BMW decided to pull out of the Upstate. It would totally wreck the South Carolina economy. Not necessarily at first, but tier 1 suppliers would slowly move away, you wouldn't see continued investment from other manufacturers, parts suppliers, cleaning companies, etc. would all move out. Who does that help in the end?
I've also gotta LOL at this:
"Save 600 jobs at the expense of lord only knows how many consumers/farmers having to pay more for products?"
Look up the whole 'right to repair' fiasco with those jokers, this isn't some noble move to save costs for consumers and farmers.
FWIW, I'm not endorsing Trumps plan, but something has to be done to keep manufacturing, and jobs in general in the US. Because if not, even the office bois are gonna be hurting sooner than later. They told everyone to learn to code then outsourced that to India. Is it fair for our kids to be competing in a labor market with people who are essentially slaves? It's not limited to manufacturing jobs anymore.
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Associate AD [1084]
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Re: Big Dummy Trump says he'll impose a 200% tariff on John Deere for moving some
Sep 25, 2024, 6:12 AM
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God forbid an American president actually doing his job and protecting hard working blue collar American jobs.
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Ultimate Tiger [36265]
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Re: Big Dummy Trump says he'll impose a 200% tariff on John Deere for moving some
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Sep 25, 2024, 8:05 AM
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Daddy will protect you, he loves you and is merciful to his loyal followers.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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Associate AD [1084]
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Re: So you like inflation, huh?***
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Sep 25, 2024, 8:29 AM
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No sir…that’s why Trump will be in office next January. Americans are tired of the prices.
And btw, I have respect for you. Whether I agree with what you say or not, intelligence is easy to spot. You stand tall amongst the majority of the folks you post with on here.
And no Jimmy, I’m not hitting on Cat, before you get all horned up. 😁
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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Yeah, I don't like it either...
Sep 25, 2024, 8:36 AM
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But you do know that with more tariffs, prices will go up? If Trump has his way with the 10 percent across the board, that'll be astronomical inflation.
And btw, I have respect for you. Whether I agree with what you say or not, intelligence is easy to spot. You stand tall amongst the majority of the folks you post with on here.
Thanks bruh, although not sure if I stand tall among the majority. There just might be enough toddlers here that it gives that false impression.
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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Associate AD [1084]
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Re: Wow. A little self-conscious now that we've raised the shades on what makes
Sep 25, 2024, 10:29 AM
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I think you’re smart too Mr. Jimmy. Amongst other things…
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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I don't have the personality you crave, but thank you.***
Sep 25, 2024, 10:37 AM
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Associate AD [1084]
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Youre welcome******
Sep 25, 2024, 11:53 AM
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Ultimate Tiger [36078]
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Did you ever take my advice about the brand and the chair?
Sep 25, 2024, 12:00 PM
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If you need some advice on where to start that conversation, here is one:
"Why did I select a rugged male protoype to represent myself online, when nobody else on TNet made a similar decision?"
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Clemson Icon [26663]
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CU Medallion [18975]
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Imposing tariffs on JD like this violates the USMCA deal that Trump himself
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Sep 25, 2024, 10:21 AM
[ in reply to Re: Big Dummy Trump says he'll impose a 200% tariff on John Deere for moving some ] |
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negotiated and touted as the greatest trade agreement ever.
What a bunch of shape shifting reactionary clowns this guy has as followers. No principles. No foundation. You'd think at some point they'd get so pretzeled up that the light would have to come on. Instead just a slow, but loud, drumbeat into further twisted darkness.
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Tiger Titan [46471]
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If he told them that repeatedly smacking themselves in the nuts...
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Sep 25, 2024, 10:58 AM
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With a sock filled with pennies was good for the economy, they'd do it.
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Ultimate Tiger [36265]
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Re: If he told them that repeatedly smacking themselves in the nuts...
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Sep 25, 2024, 11:02 AM
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EdgelordTom would come up in here and explain the brilliance of “noxious self-induced gonadal turpitude”
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Clemson Icon [26663]
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And then recommend an ENT for your "self-induced" throat condition...***
Sep 26, 2024, 11:56 PM
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Campus Hero [13362]
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By the way, do you realize that socialist Europe already has tariffs on US goods***
Sep 25, 2024, 2:39 PM
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Clemson Conqueror [11338]
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Re: By the way, do you realize that socialist Europe already has tariffs on US goods***
Sep 25, 2024, 2:51 PM
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On certain goods. Yes. They are more expensive for those certain goods.
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Heisman Winner [86887]
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Rather than a stick, why not use a carrot?
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Sep 26, 2024, 2:32 PM
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My company offshores every job that an onshore user quits, and any new jobs are filled overseas.
Rather than punish a company for moving a job overseas, why not reward them with tax incentives to keep the jobs here?
Everybody wins. More American jobs, less taxes, more people employed, buying more stuff because they have a job...paying more taxes.
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Tiger Titan [47977]
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Mainly because it won't resonate with MAGA cancel culture.***
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Sep 26, 2024, 3:10 PM
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Ultimate Tiger [33730]
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Heisman Winner [86887]
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Head Coach [998]
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Re: Rather than a stick, why not use a carrot?
Sep 26, 2024, 5:43 PM
[ in reply to Rather than a stick, why not use a carrot? ] |
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Not offering criticism but "tax incentives" at the federal level might just increase the deficit. Kinda like the perfect 2017 tRump tax changes that mostly benefitted higher income folks. Gotta make changes "revenue neutral" if there is such an animal.
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Heisman Winner [86887]
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How is that?
Sep 26, 2024, 9:34 PM
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The US employee will be federally and state payroll taxed on every dime they make. And then their purchases are taxed, both both by the fed and the state.
If the employee is in Bangalore, the US is getting zero taxes on their income, or anything they buy. In fact, the company can actually deduct the expenses used to move the jobs overseas.
Certainly the tax credit could be tied to the employee salary--which also incentivizes higher paying positions. Higher pay = higher tax credit. The incentive will have to be worth more than what the company will gain by moving the job overseas.
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