Wednesday, April 2, 2025

I guess the cheaper goods from countries like China are now going away leaving the middle class and poor in the lurch

 A Trade war like Trump is now embarking on against the whole world will likely starve to death many here in the U.S. and around the world as they are financially destroyed by all of this and won't be able to feed themselves here in the U.S. and around the world (at least initially) as people everywhere have to get used to all this.

So, the point being that I think only states in the South without union labor that much will benefit as all these corporations move back to the U.S. to where labor is the cheapest. So, states like California or new York or other richer more unionized states will likely not benefit AT ALL even years from now after corporations (those that choose to) move back their manufacturing to ONLY the South of the U.S. from about Texas to Florida and maybe up as far as Virginia?

The unionized states won't benefit at all from these tariffs.

Also, everything then will cost incredibly more than it does now because of the higher costs of U.S. Labor even in the South of the U.S. So, once again the poor and the middle Class voters and citizens will suffer the most from what Trump is doing now ongoing.

Mostly what I'm saying here is "ONLY THE RICHEST OF PEOPLE LIKE stockholders of the biggest corporations moving back to the U.S. might benefit from this years from now. 

However, all this might be temporary if Trump is only in office 4 years. So, when he leaves office (if he ever does) this all likely will change again to something else.

So, it's possible all this will ONLY last at most 4 years until the next president takes office.

Begin partial quote from: NBC NEws: For some reason my Edit function will not copy the URL to share it with you today.

The announcement is an effort to impose sweeping changes on decades-old trading arrangements under which the United States increasingly outsourced some labor-intensive manufacturing to foreign countries in return for cheaper goods — at the cost, critics have said, of America’s industrial base. 

end quote from NBC NEWS.

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