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Back when inflation was high all over the world due to the global, post COVID recovery you ignorantly said the Biden admin was causing it intentionally. As you know, that's horseshit.
How did he risk his reputation? His cult will always support anything he does, and he doesn't care about anybody else. Everybody else already knows he is a stupid pig anyway..LMAO!
While I'm not sure how much I actually agree with what was done, Trump laid himself on the line by doing what he did in Iran. He risked his reputation big time and I'm sure he knows it. And it's not the first time he was not afraid to act on his beliefs.
I'm not talking about food either. I'm talking about the new Wall Street phrase. TACO = Trump Always Chickens Out. Thisis what Wall Street now uses to define Trump's threats of tariffs because he always backs off, just like he did this week with the EU.
What is the ‘TACO trade’ on Wall Street?
There’s a new trade on Wall Street: the TACO trade, standing for “Trump Always Chickens Out.”
The term was coined by Robert Armstrong, a writer for the Financial Times, and is intended to capture how markets have fallen on Trump’s vow to impose steep tariffs on imports to the United States and then jump back up when Trump announces pauses on those tariffs.
The private sector lost 33,000 jobs in June, badly missing expectations for a 100,000 increase, ADP says
Uh oh.
Notably, according to your link,
"the ADP report has a spotty track record on predicting the subsequent government jobs report,
It's not clever it was a loser from the day it was founded and the only thing it makes me want to do is go to Taco Bell. You need some new material.I'm not talking about food either. I'm talking about the new Wall Street phrase. TACO = Trump Always Chickens Out. Thisis what Wall Street now uses to define Trump's threats of tariffs because he always backs off, just like he did this week with the EU.
What is the ‘TACO trade’ on Wall Street?
There’s a new trade on Wall Street: the TACO trade, standing for “Trump Always Chickens Out.”
The term was coined by Robert Armstrong, a writer for the Financial Times, and is intended to capture how markets have fallen on Trump’s vow to impose steep tariffs on imports to the United States and then jump back up when Trump announces pauses on those tariffs.
Does it actually make sense to any trumple that one reckless, fickle, ignorant person should have unilateral power to change the direction of national economic policy when he wakes up each morning? In Canada's case over its support for Palestinian statehood. And in Brazil's case over its prosecution of Bolsonaro.......a friend of Dotard's.
Dow futures drop 400 points after Trump issues new tariffs
Trump seeks to use Canada’s recognition of Palestinian state as leverage in trade talks
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Trump seeks to use Canada's recognition of Palestinian state as leverage in trade talks
President Donald Trump says Canada’s announcement it'll recognize a Palestinian state “will make it very hard” for the U.S. to reach a trade agreement with it.apnews.com
The dow dropped because of the INACTION OF THE FED TO LOWER INTEREST RATES, you lying SCUMBAG.Does it actually make sense to any trumple that one reckless, fickle, ignorant person should have unilateral power to change the direction of national economic policy when he wakes up each morning? In Canada's case over its support for Palestinian statehood. And in Brazil's case over its prosecution of Bolsonaro.......a friend of Dotard's.
Dow futures drop 400 points after Trump issues new tariffs
Trump seeks to use Canada’s recognition of Palestinian state as leverage in trade talks
![]()
Trump seeks to use Canada's recognition of Palestinian state as leverage in trade talks
President Donald Trump says Canada’s announcement it'll recognize a Palestinian state “will make it very hard” for the U.S. to reach a trade agreement with it.apnews.com
Putting aside that misguided notion, he does not possess unilateral authority to change tariff policy because he doesn't like that a fellow insurrectionist is being prosecuted.It makes moresense to me to have him working in my behalf
Congress granted the Executive branch the power to wage tariffs, so suck a diseased DICK, Stalinberg.Putting aside that misguided notion, he does not possess unilateral authority to change tariff policy because he doesn't like that a fellow insurrectionist is being prosecuted.
Trump's sweeping tariffs are set to go into effect Friday. Since he postponed the biggest hikes in April because of market turmoil, Trump has announced an array of tariff levels with about a dozen trading partners. Many of them closely resemble the rates Trump threatened to impose in early April, although some are higher and a few are slightly lower.
Businesses of every size have said tariffs have caused confusion and uncertainty and have made it extremely difficult to plan. "Retailers typically plan their inventories six to nine months in advance to meet seasonal demand. However, unpredictable and rapidly changing tariff policies are making it nearly impossible to forecast costs, place orders and manage supply chains effectively," the National Retail Federation said in June.
V.O.S. Selections Inc., a wine and spirits importer, and Plastic Services and Products, a pipe and fittings company, sued Trump over his use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) of 1977, saying he has “no authority to issue across-the-board worldwide tariffs without congressional approval.”
The Court of International Trade initially blocked the tariffs in late May. It found that the import duties lacked “any identifiable limits” and that the law Trump cited in many of his executive orders did not “delegate an unbounded tariff authority to the President.” It also said the tariffs did not meet the test of an “unusual and extraordinary” risk to the country.
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Trump's tariffs face crucial court test on eve of latest deadline
A handful of businesses sued President Donald Trump over his use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977, the rationale he uses to enact worldwide tariffs.www.nbcnews.com