China Fails to See Their Tariffs Toppling Their Tyrannical, Commie Red Regime!

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By Brig Gen (ret) Blaine HoltThursday, 15 May 2025 05:15 PM EDTCurrent | Bio | Archive


Checkmate China

Does everyone now understand that fair trade is a secondary goal of Trump's tariffs?

A grand strategy is emerging.


The best strategies in geopolitics are complex, going after multiple effects simultaneously rather than a blunt force object like a neocon fueled, bombing campaign to secure behavior change from one sole actor.

President Donald J. Trump and his team are turning to weaponry America possesses far more lethal than any tank or bomber.

We the People are the weapon.

In 2023, Americans spent just shy of $4 trillion on shoddy Chinese, Indian, Canadian, Vietnamese, Mexican and other Third World "so called nations" mismanufactured products, goods, and services.

The lion's share of those numbers being high margin finished goods, not bulk commodities.

We are a nation of consumers.

Our consumption economy is putting the most formidable weapon available in our president's "America First" hands . . . Leverage.

Access to American markets via tariff controls not only sues for fair trade bilaterally, in the case of despotic regimes like the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), they can shape behavior.

Tariffs have potential to topple tyranny.

China has taken that harsh fact, and us, for granted.

Over the years the CCP has come to rely on a lumbering country whose politicians and bureaucrats, few of which have ever built a business or sweated payrolls and other overhead, who were all too happy to sell out the land of the free and home of the brave to enrich themselves, sending our manufacturing to mainland China.

Trump 1.0 (c. 2017-2020) began to address this problem despite all the antibodies the swamp could throw at him.

The CCP breathed a sigh of relief when Biden's questionable win stuck to the wall, and business as usual could make its return.

China wins, Mainstreet USA loses.

Then came Trump 2.0/commander in chief number 47.

The first 100 days back in the Oval were a blur of executive actions and chaos at a whole new level, even by swamp standards.

Under the cover of a president looking to address ridiculous trade deficits and lost jobs with protectionist tariffs, the real target, China's CCP, was obscured.

The press, sensing something was afoot, suddenly became macroeconomic, monetary and trade policy experts overnight, attempting to evangelize Americans that the loss of cheap stuff at Walmart would end them.

In addition to tariffs already on the books, Xi Jinping and the party were slammed with 145% uptick.

Rather than quietly approach President Trump to find a new path, the arrogant Communists already facing an economic disaster from their own central planner lunacies, predictably went into full attack.

The Chinese foreign ministry vowed to "fight to the end."

China would never yield.

Afterall, China stole American manufacturing fair and square, one corrupt politician at a time.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called the regime's bluff.

The CCP blinked.

Vowing never to negotiate, the CCP delegation came to Switzerland, hat in hand, inking a 90-day pause that only strengthened the Trump hand.

The mainstream media says the opposite happened, but we expected that didn't we?

Note: If you think this isn't about China, ask the UK's PM Keir Starmer.

He inked a trade deal with President Trump, in which the fine print says the U.S. gets to review any deals the UK contemplates with China.

Poor Xi, flying all over Asia, looking to build an anti-U.S. trading coalition, saddened to learn his "friends" were sticking with the U.S.

Author of "Plan Red: China's Project to Destroy America," Gordon Chang, astutely identified that this is about much more than commerce:

"Trade with China is not just about trade. Trade with China finances the Communist Party's assault on both smaller states — Beijing is conducting proxy wars on three continents--and on America. If we want peace, we must stop funding China's wars. This should not be hard to understand."

China's predatory dumping, drug cartel and fentanyl support, interference in American politics, disregard of World Trade Organization (WTO) rules, theft of intellectual property and support for enemies of the U.S. are just a few of the CCP efforts which must stop if they want balanced access to American markets.

Today, the CCP looks on with horror as their banks fail, currency plummets, and factories, capital, and entrepreneurs flee their country.

Last week, domestic unrest and the vaporized economy led the party to stop publishing all economic data.

CCP censorship isn't stopping angry workers who haven't been paid in months from burning down factories.

Real estate crashes and bank failures have the party on the ropes.

Trump 2.0 sees this.

A Purge Too Far?

Social media and independent journalists are pointing to a potential replacing of Xi Jinping and the Politburo by the Fourth Plenum this fall, engineered by Vice Chairman of the Military Committee General Zhang Youxia.

It's clear with purges and counter-purges that party infighting is bubbling over.

While they struggle for control, they may be ignoring the real threat these Trump 2.0 policies have created; an angry Chinese people who want to see the Mao Dynasty end and are increasingly contemplative of doing something about it.

Is there a "Mr. Xi, Tear Down This Wall!" moment coming soon?
 
China inferior cheap products? You use an iPhone? You own apple stock? You drive a Ford?

all has mass produced parts from China in them.

I have NEVER, nor will I EVER own Chinese made junk, ie... iPhone or iPad.

I despise the crap Apple manufactures, more than I despise Tesla!!!!!

I have never bought any GM or Ford built vehicle.
 
In 2016 I bought a motherboard for $60 directly from the manufacturer in China. The identical motherboard, made by the same manufacturer, was sold by US vendors for $120.00.

I'm pleased to say that my computer is still running strong after 9 years.
 
I have NEVER, nor will I EVER own Chinese made junk, ie... iPhone or iPad.

I despise the crap Apple manufactures, more than I despise Tesla!!!!!

I have never bought any GM or Ford built vehicle.

So, unless you own a Nothing Phone then you have a phone that has parts from China. What is wrong with Apple, the stock splits every 4-5 years and is good stuff.
 
China inferior cheap products? You use an iPhone? You own apple stock? You drive a Ford?

all has mass produced parts from China in them.

Exactly right.

China's manufacturing capabilities has grown substantially since the 1960s and 1970s when "Made in China" was pretty much synonymous with shoddy, cheap, and terrible products. When the factories are directly run by a U.S. or EU manufacturer those companies set the standard for the products that roll of their assembly lines and they require that standard to match what their factories in other countries must meet. Thus, for example, Apple made goods in China meet the same standard as those they produce in the U.S. and other countries too. I've owned and used Apple computers, smart phones, and other Apple products going back to their early days making the Apple II computer in California in the 70s and 80s. Every one of those products has been a high quality product that lasted me for years. Not once in all that time have I ever been disappointed with the quality of an Apple product.

Today just because a product is assembled in China or contains parts made in China no longer automatically means the product is crap. Sure, a lot of the stuff made in China for their domestic market are often cheap poor quality goods. But China would not be the manufacturing export powerhouse it is today if all it sold to the West were those crappy products. Most products you buy today that have electronic components in them have at least one part that is sourced from China. Many of those parts are well made because the markets they sell to won't buy shoddy second rate goods. The combination of being able to produce their goods at a high standard with very low wages is what drew U.S. to offshore much of their production in China. That, in turn, is why U.S. companies were screaming at Trump when he announced his 125% Chinese tariff early in his administration. Trump and his staff got the message and they backed off that stance.

What the final tarriffs will be after all the negotiations are concluded are impossible for me to predict except that it's a very good bet they'll nowhere close to that 125% tariff. The Trump administration's clumsy handling of tariffs is one of the reasons his support in the polls is dropping. Buyers are starting to see the price increases hit their wallet and they are not happy. For Trump to meet his promise to lower inflation slapping high tariffs on imported is exactly the wrong thing to do. Higher tariffs guarantee higher prices. Trump has put himself in knot that will be hard to get out of because he can't do all that he promised in the campaign. Making good on one of those promises may well blow up any chance of meeting some other promise that he made.

He fell into the politician trap of over promising what he could actually deliver. It got him some votes but it also set high expectations that he is unlikely to meet.
 
Yeah, if you are retired then you probably shouldn't but the ROI has been quite good.

True for savvy investors, however, even savvy investors are sometimes clobbered by shenanigans instigated by certain institutions, companies, even governmental actions, or squabbles between nations, and world disorder nation states.
 

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