Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

Look folks, Trump’s tirades about tariffs is solely meant to gain the support of unions and people whose jobs have been shipped overseas...it is not a policy platform, it is vote-getting speech. The guy deals with this stuff globaly, he knows how the system works...he has built an empire knowing how the system works...get over it! Think about why he is using this campaign subject...it’s to garner votes from people who need jobs...it is not a foreign policy position...


4 posted on 05/09/2016 5:09:52 PM PDT by Stayfree (FlushHillary.com says "NEVER HILLARY", "NEVER HILLARY", "NEVER HILLARY")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]


To: Stayfree

<< The guy deals with this stuff globally, he knows how the system works... >>

Amen, baby, Amen.

They are trying to take TRUMP and put him in a box and he will not cooperate.

One in six men are jobless or incarcerated, in this country.

Fix it, or we are dead.

GO TRUMP! 2016


12 posted on 05/09/2016 5:14:49 PM PDT by RitaOK (Viva Christo Rey. Public education is the farm team for more Marxists coming-- infinitum.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

To: Stayfree

I expect long overdue retaliatory tariffs against countries like China and Japan. If he doesn’t do it then he will lose all political support. It better be real.


17 posted on 05/09/2016 5:17:35 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

To: Stayfree

“It’s just massive pandering, trust me.”


21 posted on 05/09/2016 5:19:48 PM PDT by Phinneous
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

To: Stayfree

Consider that the (Reagan) administration has done the following:

— Forced Japan to accept restraints on auto exports. The agreement set total Japanese auto exports at 1.68 million vehicles in 1981-82, 8 percent below 1980 exports. Two years later the level was permitted to rise to 1.85 million.(33) Clifford Winston of the Brookings Institution found that the import limits have actually cost jobs in the U.S. auto industry by making it possible for the sheltered American automakers to raise prices and limit production. In 1984, Winston writes in Blind Intersection? Policy and the Automobile Industry, 32,000 jobs were lost, U.S. production fell by 300,000 units, and profits for U.S. firms increased $8.9 billion. The quotas have also made the Japanese firms potentially more formidable rivals because they have begun building assembly plants in the United States.(34) They also shifted production to larger cars, introducing to American firms competition they did not have before the quotas were created. In 1984, it was estimated that higher prices for domestic and imported cars cost consumers $2.2 billion a year.(35) At the height of the dollar’s exchange rate with the yen in 1984-85, the quotas were costing American consumers the equivalent of $11 billion a year.(36)

— Tightened up considerably the quotas on imported sugar. Imports fell from an annual average of 4.85 million tons in 1979-81 to an annual average of 2.86 million tons in 1982-86. Not only did this continued practice force Americans to spend more than other consumers for sugar, but it created hardships for Latin American countries and the Philippines, which depend on sugar exports for economic development. The quota program undermined President Reagan’s Caribbean Basin Initiative and intensified the international debt crisis.(37)

— Negotiated to increase restrictiveness of the Multifiber Arrangement and extended restrictions to previously unrestricted textiles. The administration unilaterally changed the rule of origin in order to restrict textile and apparel imports further and imposed a special ceiling on textiles from the People’s Republic of China.(38) Finally, it pressured Hong Kong, Taiwan, and South Korea, the largest exporters of textiles and apparel to the United States, into highly restrictive bilateral agreements. All told, textile and apparel restrictions cost Americans more than $20 billion a year.(39) The Reagan administration has stated several times that textile and apparel imports should grow no faster than the domestic market.(40)

— Required 18 countries—including Brazil, Spain, South Korea, Japan, Mexico, South Africa, Finland, and Australia, as well as the European Community—to accept “voluntary restraint agreements” to reduce steel imports, guaranteeing domestic producers a share of the American market. When 3 countries not included in the 18—Canada, Sweden, and Taiwan— increased steel exports to the United States, the administration demanded talks to check the increase. The administration also imposed tariffs and quotas on specialty steel. These policies, with their resulting shortages, have severely squeezed American steel-using firms, making them less competitive in world markets and eliminating more than 52,000 jobs.(41)

— Imposed a five-year duty, beginning at 45 percent, on Japanese motorcycles for the benefit of Harley Davidson, which admitted that superior Japanese management was the cause of its problems.(42)

— Raised tariffs on Canadian lumber and cedar shingles.

— Forced the Japanese into an agreement to control the price of computer memory-chip exports and increase Japanese purchases of American-made chips. When the agreement was allegedly broken, the administration imposed a 100 percent tariff on $300 million worth of electronics goods. This episode teaches a classic lesson in how protectionism comes back to haunt a country’s producers. The quotas established as a result of the agreement have created a severe shortage of memory chips and higher prices for American computer makers, putting them at a disadvantage with foreign competitors. Only two American firms are still making these chips, accounting for a small percentage of the world market.(43)

— Removed Third World countries from the duty-free import program for developing nations on several occasions.

— Pressed Japan to force its automakers to buy more American-made parts.(44)

— Demanded that Taiwan, West Germany, Japan, and Switzerland restrain their exports of machine tools, with some market shares rolled back to 1981 levels. Other countries were warned not to increase their shares of the U.S. market.

— Accused the Japanese of dumping roller bearings, because the price did not rise to cover a fall in the value of the yen. The U.S. Customs Service was ordered to collect duties equal to the so-called dumping margins.(45)

— Accused the Japanese of dumping forklift trucks and color picture tubes.(46)

— Failed to ask Congress to end the ban on the export of Alaskan oil and of timber cut from federal lands, a measure that could substantially increase U.S. exports to Japan.

— Redefined “dumping” in order “to make it easier to bring charges of unfair trade practices against certain competitors.”(47)

— Beefed up the Export-Import Bank, an institution dedicated to promoting the exports of a handful of large companies at the expense of everyone else.(48)

— Extended quotas on imported clothespins.


23 posted on 05/09/2016 5:21:00 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

To: Stayfree

he talks about currency manipulation all the time. China devalues their currency its as good as a tariff on our goods

It is impossible for american products to compete and he has been saying this for 30 years!


34 posted on 05/09/2016 5:36:58 PM PDT by ground_fog
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

To: Stayfree
Think about why he is using this campaign subject...it’s to garner votes from people who need jobs...it is not a foreign policy position...Mean while Levin and other Never Trump idiots keep driving voters to Trump.
35 posted on 05/09/2016 5:37:27 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Vote for Trump and break your cycle of Battered Conservative Syndrome!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

To: Stayfree

You’re so lost in space...


61 posted on 05/09/2016 6:01:08 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (He wins & we do, our nation does, the world does. It's morning in America again. You are living it!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

To: Stayfree

“...it is vote-getting speech.”

You mean, when Trump was interviewed by Oprah Winfrey in 1988, and he was talking about how the trade deals were destroying the American economy, he was saying it only to get votes in 2016?

You Cruz-bot morons will just not give it up.


63 posted on 05/09/2016 6:10:24 PM PDT by odawg
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

To: Stayfree

Look folks, Trump’s tirades about tariffs is solely meant to gain the support of unions and people whose jobs have been shipped overseas...it is not a policy platform, it is vote-getting speech.
++++
That’s fine. But he has 90% of the Freepers arguing in favor of his goofy statements about tariffs. Free Republic now has majority support for adding burdensome taxes on Americans who want to buy iPhones from China. They believe adding 46% to the price of an iPad is just a jolly good idea.

Amazing transformation. And you think it is just a ploy. I hope you are right.


71 posted on 05/09/2016 6:39:49 PM PDT by InterceptPoint (Still a Cruz Fan but voting for Trump)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson