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"A politician will do almost anything to keep their job, even become a patriot" - Hearst
Tariffs are a good thing and are necessary as a counterweight to the imabalances created by unrestricted free trade and concentrated capital, especially now when the American business landscape is so decimated by decades of insolubility. It is a mistake to confuse the dependency on cheap products form overseas as beneficial for American consumers - the same consumers need jobs, or so, this is at least what we used to think, before the socialism took hold.
In a way, the left's calls for a UBI are related, because they are giving up on employment in the private sector, so, their answer is just to print and handout money that finds its way back into supporting the corporations -- who own more and more as consolidation has killed the old local and regional players.
I'm for tariffs, but not only on the national level. I would also support them on the state or even county level, to protect the people and small, family-owned businesses, and the cultural identities of whatever is left in our beleaguered, homogenized country.
They should not be blanket tariffs, however, as some countries enjoy centuries of established superiority in certain sectors, as we do, and those cultural proclivities shouldn't be discriminated against. They can facilitate advantageous trade where the best of both is exchanged for like, and happier outcomes can thrive.
Last edited by Snowball; 11-16-2024 at 04:24 PM.
"When Sombart says: "Capitalism is born from the money-loan", I should like to add to this: Capitalism actually exists only in the money-loan;" - Theodor Fritsch
Never attempt to teach a pig to sing; it wastes your time and annoys the pig.
Robert Heinlein
Give a man an inch and right away he thinks he's a ruler
Groucho Marx
I love mankind…it’s people I can’t stand.
Linus, from the Peanuts comic
You cannot have liberty without morality and morality without faith
Alexis de Torqueville
Those who fail to learn from the past are condemned to repeat it.
Those who learn from the past are condemned to watch everybody else repeat it
A Zero Hedge comment
- It's ironic that so many libertarians are automatically opposed to anything that Trump is for, apparently for no other reason than that Trump is for it. The Chase-Oliver-Libertines bring up the "Old Right" but only when it suits them; the Old Right also believed in Sunday Laws, vagrancy laws, traditional marriage, etc. Bringing back the culture of the Old Right in 2024 would create a very uncomfortable situation for rainbow "libertarians".
- There are many things about the Constitution that are not pure minarchy. However, compared to the modern multi-trillion dollar monstrosity we call "the Federal government", a government that actually obeyed the Constitution would essentially be a libertarian Utopia, by comparison, both economically and culturally (small government simply doesn't have the resources to police what you do in your bedroom if it is not a crime of aggression, no matter what laws are on the books.)
- In particular, the Constitution gives the Federal government the power to levy tariffs at the borders. From economics, we know that tariffs impose a burden on domestic consumers vis-a-vis foreign consumers. However, we also know from economics that every form of government resourcement necessarily reduces economic efficiency, so it's always a matter of "pick your poison".
- The most deadly of all poisons is the unapportioned (thus, unconstitutional) personal income tax because it adds to the economic burden the unconstitutional violation of personal privacy (violates 4th amendment protection against unreasonable search/seizure). Everybody is required to "show their accounts" to the IRS on pain of truly medieval punishment should they fail to comply. In other words, the IRS makes the entire Federal government into a protection racket: we must buy protection from the IRS by voluntarily violating our own 4th-amendment protections or face the consequences. Border tariffs of equal magnitude to the income tax (combined with real abolition of the income tax at SCOTUS-level by virtue of its unconsitutionality, protecting against future regressions by Congress) would provide equal resourcement to the Federal government while not requiring violation of the 4th-amendment protections of US citizens. All told, the economic consequences of $X trillion of government revenue drawn from source A or source B is roughly equivalent and will be arbitraged by the market one way or the other. Thus, while tariffs have negative economic consequences, so do income taxes, and $X trillion dollars of tariffs are equally negative to $X trillion of income tax but without the added devastation of constitutional protection of personal privacy in the 4A which income taxes entail. Tariffs have negative economic consequences; for the same total revenue, income taxes have all the same negative economic consequences and they violate our constitutional rights.
Don't just fall for the propaganda, people! Think!
Jer. 11:18-20. "The Kingdom of God has come upon you." -- Matthew 12:28
__________________________________________________ ________________
"A politician will do almost anything to keep their job, even become a patriot" - Hearst
__________________________________________________ ________________
"A politician will do almost anything to keep their job, even become a patriot" - Hearst
__________________________________________________ ________________
"A politician will do almost anything to keep their job, even become a patriot" - Hearst
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