Even the Canadian Teddy Cruz tried to tell Trump tariffs are not good!

Astrostar

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Trump has this ignorant idea that tariffs are imposed on and paid by foreign nations, when they actually are a tax paid by the American companies and people. As he has shown on many occasions with his arguments with the Federal Reserve, Trump is an aggressive dummy on finance! Cruz tried to tell him his tariffs are bad and Trump exploded with rage!

He likes to brag that he attended the Wharton Business School, and that makes him some sort of financial genius. Yet, this is a president who doesn't even understand how his tariffs work; they are a burdensome tax on the American people. I bet he couldn't even prove he went to Wharton. Show us some transcripts, please!

Bigly!!!
 
 

Trump has this ignorant idea that tariffs are imposed on and paid by foreign nations, when they actually are a tax paid by the American companies and people. As he has shown on many occasions with his arguments with the Federal Reserve, Trump is an aggressive dummy on finance! Cruz tried to tell him his tariffs are bad and Trump exploded with rage!

He likes to brag that he attended the Wharton Business School, and that makes him some sort of financial genius. Yet, this is a president who doesn't even understand how his tariffs work; they are a burdensome tax on the American people. I bet he couldn't even prove he went to Wharton. Show us some transcripts, please!

Bigly!!!
Canadian?

are you attempting to PROVE you're a moron?


no need

everyone already knows.
 

Trump has this ignorant idea that tariffs are imposed on and paid by foreign nations, when they actually are a tax paid by the American companies and people. As he has shown on many occasions with his arguments with the Federal Reserve, Trump is an aggressive dummy on finance! Cruz tried to tell him his tariffs are bad and Trump exploded with rage!

He likes to brag that he attended the Wharton Business School, and that makes him some sort of financial genius. Yet, this is a president who doesn't even understand how his tariffs work; they are a burdensome tax on the American people. I bet he couldn't even prove he went to Wharton. Show us some transcripts, please!

Bigly!!!


I wonder does Ted Cruz know about the off the scale huge error that then Prime Minister Pierre E. Trudeau made back in 1974?



HOW PIERRE TRUDEAU TURNED US INTO DEBT SLAVES
Click on the link above to watch Part 3 of my video series on the Canadian Banking System. Please also read accompanying text below.
Trudeaumania was just gearing up when I immigrated to Canada in late 1966. I, too, was impressed with Trudeau. He was intelligent, articulate, with liberal ideas. And as Prime Minister, Trudeau repatriated the Canadian Constitution and told the morals’ police to stay out of people’s bedrooms. But then…but then. As Anthony’s famous speech in Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar reminds us… “the evil that men do live after them while the good is often interred with their bones. So let it be with Caesar.”

But somehow this worked backward for Trudeau. Many Canadians still think highly of Pierre Trudeau, but in 1974 he did one terrible thing that changed the lives, for present and future, of all Canadians, for the worse. Trudeau gave the leading operations of the Bank of Canada over to the private banks operating in Canada.

The Bank of Canada was first established by Prime Minister Richard Bennet in 1935 as a private central bank, but was then nationalized by William Lyon Mackenzie King in 1938. By nationalizing the bank, Mackenzie King meant for it to belong to the people so the Canadian government could borrow funds with little or no interest for capital expenditures. The mandate of the newly nationalized Bank of Canada was to act as the banker to the government and to manage the public debt. As Mackenzie King famously said: “Once a nation parts with the control of their currency and credit, it matters not who makes that nation’s laws. Usury, once in control, will wreck any nation. Until the control of the issue of currency and credit is restored to government and recognized as its most sacred responsibility, all talk of sovereignty of parliament and of democracy is idle and futile.”


So the Bank of Canada was nationalized in 1938 and the government could now borrow money with little or no interest. And it worked. The Canadian government built freeways, public transportation systems, subway line, airports, the St. Lawrence Seaway and funded a national health care system and the Canada Pension Plan. But then Trudeau, under the influence of the international financial group called Basel’s
Committee’s Recommendations (The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision) made the decision to halt the borrowing of money from the Bank of Canada, and instead, chose to borrow from the private banks who instead of lending to the government at no interest, or low interest, introduced higher interest rates along with compound interest.

All banks know very well the magic of compound interest. And Pierre Trudeau must have known that the mounting compounded national debt would lead to Canadians eventually owing a dollar fifty for every dollar of their disposable incomes. After all, he studied economics at the London School of Economics. Surely the professors there knew about compound interest.

So Pierre Trudeau, instead of feeling blessed that Canada, unlike the US, had a nationalized central bank, signed our bank away to the private banks. Couldn’t Trudeau, such an educated man, surmise that citizens in a few years would be struggling to make car payments and meet rent and mortgages and student loans and to buy healthy food while last year’s profits for the big five (that’s Royal Bank, TD Bank, Scotiabank, Bank of Montreal and CIBC amounted to $31.7 billion?) If he did, he didn’t care. But it doesn’t have to be this way. It really doesn’t. Our Bank of
Canada is still there. Next time." (Ms. Betty Krawczyk)

In theory the Bank of Canada could be used again to give loans to provinces to give loans to companies so that they can easily pay the Trump Tariffs?


Economist John Hotson, Economist Harold Chorney, Economist Mario Secarrecia explained how that could be done again.
By Harold Chorney, John Hotson and Mario Seccareccia:


“Governments these days find it easy to defend cuts in services and programs. All they have to do is point to their annual deficits and their total accumulated debts. (As of March, 1994, Canada's public debt was about $546 billion.) This public debt provides the politicians with a convenient excuse for cutting spending or raising taxes. Or both. “We're broke”, they tell us plaintively. “We can't afford to increase public services, or even keep them at their present level.”

A lesson from the War

https://www.michaeljournal.org/arti...ce-our-country-debt-free-say-three-economists


......
“Many economists rail against «wage push», and it's true that wages have risen by 2,700% over the past 50 years. But in the same period government tax revenue went up by 3,400%, and net interest by 26,000%! Yet, most of the economic textbooks that deplore rising wages don't even mention the tax and interest pushes. And it is not because they are complex ideas — rather, they are simple and obvious — but because it would be so embarrassing for economists to admit they've made a boner of such magnitude: that their theory of monetary policy violates basic principles of scientific logic."


The creation of money



“One of the most pervasive myths about the government deficit is that governments which spend more than they receive in revenue must borrow the difference, thus increasing the public debt.

“In fact, a government can choose to create the needed additional money instead of borrowing it from the banks, the public, or foreigners.

“Business and the conservatives in politics and the media are horrified by the suggestion that the government exercise its right to create more money. They claim it would precipitate another ruinous bout of inflation.

“But money creation is money creation — whether by a private bank or the Bank of Canada. And a government in debt only to the government's own bank is not really in debt at all. If it wants to go through the rigamarole of having the Treasury «borrow» from the central bank and later pay interest, that is a minor matter of bookkeeping. As long as the central bank's profits are returned to the Treasury, the results are much the same as if the Treasury had created the money itself.

“There is no reason why the growth of Canada's money supply (averaging about $22 billion annually in recent years) could not be more substantially created by the Bank of Canada. If that policy had been followed, the federal government would not have been obliged to add to its debts to pay interest on old debts. Instead, the Bank of Canada has produced barely 2% of the money added in recent years, while the chartered banks added the rest as they made loans to households, businesses, and all levels of government. At the very least, the Bank of Canada and the chartered banks should share the privilege of creating money on a 50-50 basis.

“Those who dismiss such a proposal as “inflationary” should be required to explain why it would be more inflationary for the government's bank to create $11 billion and the private banks $11 billion, rather than the present practice of having the government's bank create $0.7 billion and the private banks $21.3 billion!

“Clearly the current problem of the Canadian government's deficit is not its absolute size, or its size relative to the GDP, but the insane way it is being financed. A return to the policies of the World War II era, when the Bank of Canada produced almost one-half of the new money at near-zero interest, would do wonders for the economy, while greatly shrinking the deficit... The first order of business for a post-Mulroney-era government must be to regain effective control of the Bank of Canada and make it the primary source of money creation.

It is ludicrous for the government to put billions of dollars into circulation by borrowing from the private banks, when it can create the extra money it needs, virtually free.”


Banks create money
 

Trump has this ignorant idea that tariffs are imposed on and paid by foreign nations, when they actually are a tax paid by the American companies and people. As he has shown on many occasions with his arguments with the Federal Reserve, Trump is an aggressive dummy on finance! Cruz tried to tell him his tariffs are bad and Trump exploded with rage!

He likes to brag that he attended the Wharton Business School, and that makes him some sort of financial genius. Yet, this is a president who doesn't even understand how his tariffs work; they are a burdensome tax on the American people. I bet he couldn't even prove he went to Wharton. Show us some transcripts, please!

Bigly!!!
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