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Same thing I'm trying to figure out.That's my fear, so in the end what's the benefit of tariffs?
And they were a shit idea then, as well.
No one complained about this "shit idea" back then. Why was that?And they were a shit idea then, as well.
I did. Tariffs were wrong under Trump and Biden extending them was wrong.No one complained about this "shit idea" back then. Why was that?
Because those that hated Biden would agree they were a shit idea. The thread would be 3 posts before it turned into Biden-insult memes.No one complained about this "shit idea" back then. Why was that?
I agreed with Biden on this one.Because those that hated Biden would agree they were a shit idea. The thread would be 3 posts before it turned into Biden-insult memes.
Suuuuure. It still would have had 3 posts and turned into a meme fest.I agreed with Biden on this one.
“"For too long, the Chinese government has poured state money into Chinese steel companies,” Biden said in Pittsburgh. “They’re not competing, they’re cheating.”
U.S. Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.), along with Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) was among a group of seven Democratic senators who urged the Biden administration to “maintain or increase the tariffs to address China’s continued actions to cheat and undermine our national security.” On Wednesday, Casey called the Wednesday announcement “a victory for Pennsylvania workers and our Nation’s steel industry.”"
Definitely a security issue. Look no further than Europe's dependence on Russian natural gas, and how that played out.Suuuuure. It still would have had 3 posts and turned into a meme fest.
Anyway, the real reason the US doesn't produce steel is because we don't use as much steel anymore. Not even the Infrastructure Act did much to change that. China and India increased steel capacity for 40yrs and both are now discovering they have too much capacity. If the goal is to make US producers competitive on a global basis I should tell you it is a pipe-dream. It is more of a national security discussion at this point. We need steel producers and may need to spend money to keep them afloat. We can maybe start by penalizing buyers of cheap foreign steel (the tariff does this to some degree, but not directly) or require the use of US steel in projects with Federal funds (which also seem to be on the DOGE chopping block). Conundrum.