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   alt.fan.rush-limbaugh      Fans of the great one, Rush Limbaugh      278,939 messages   

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   Message 278,255 of 278,939   
   Zee to All   
   Trump Says Americans Are OK With A Littl   
   21 Feb 26 06:46:46   
   
   XPost: sac.politics   
   From: x@y.com   
      
   Trump says Americans are ‘OK’ with a little disturbance. With U.S.   
   households facing a tax increase of more than $1,200 a year, they aren’t   
   March 13, 2025   
      
      
      
   David-Olive   
   By David Olive   
   Star Business Columnist   
      
      
      
   U.S. President Donald Trump began his inaugural address Jan. 20 with these   
   words: “The golden age of America begins right now.”   
      
   Most Americans do not yet feel they are living in a more prosperous age.   
      
   To the contrary, they are afraid that the inflation Trump vowed to destroy   
   will come roaring back. They fear that tens of thousands of jobs are at   
   risk from Trump’s tariffs and massive federal layoffs.   
      
   And that the Trump administration will reduce Social Security, Medicaid and   
   veterans’ benefits to close an immense federal budget gap.   
   ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW   
      
   In recent weeks, investors spooked by tariff uncertainty have sold off   
   hundreds of billions of dollars in stocks.   
      
   Americans are right to be concerned.   
      
   Trump’s tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China will amount to an annual tax   
   increase for the median American household of $1,200 (U.S.), according to   
   the Washington, D.C.-based Peterson Institute for International Economics.   
      
   The Wall Street Journal reports that Trump’s “tariffs are paralyzing   
   business and scaring consumers.”   
      
   This month, Trump has imposed, modified, then largely postponed tariffs,   
   then threatened new surtaxes.   
      
   Adding to that uncertainty are Trump’s slash-and-burn firing of thousands   
   of federal employees and abrupt cuts in the budgets of government   
   departments and agencies.   
      
   Those cuts have a knock-on effect on businesses and universities across the   
   country that are losing government contracts.   
   ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW   
      
   The U.S. economy is expected to lose about 500,000 jobs this year.   
      
   That’s a recent estimate, before Trump’s tariffs, if all of them are fully   
   enacted, inflict their maximum negative effect on employers reliant on   
   Canada, Mexico and China — the targets of Trump’s tariffs so far — for the   
   goods they sell or the raw materials they buy.   
      
   Morgan Stanley Research forecasts that U.S. inflation, excluding volatile   
   food and energy prices, will rise to an average of 2.7 per cent in 2025.   
      
   Goldman Sachs sees inflation rising to an average of three per cent,   
   compared with its estimate of 2.1 per cent in the absence of Trump’s   
   tariffs.   
      
   Canadian inflation was measured at 1.9 per cent in January, down from the   
   2024 average of 2.4 per cent.   
      
   The U.S. Conference Board reported that Americans’ economic expectations   
   had dropped in February by the largest amount since the early months of the   
   pandemic, to 72.9 points on its consumer confidence index.   
      
   A reading below 80 signals a potential recession, the board says.   
      
   Trump’s agenda “will slow economic growth,” Michael R. Strain, an economist   
   at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, told the   
   New York Times last week.   
      
      
   “It will take money out of people’s pockets. It will increase the   
   unemployment rate. It will cost people jobs. It will make American   
   businesses less competitive.”   
      
   Trump inherited a strong U.S. economy and might feel it can withstand his   
   radical policies.   
      
   They include the biggest tariff hike in a century, and a plan to deport two   
   million immigrants who make up a large portion of the workforce in the   
   health care, agriculture, construction and hospitality sectors.   
      
   Trump warned in his State of the Union address March 4 that “there’ll be a   
   little disturbance, but we’re OK with that.”   
      
   The stock market, for one, is not OK with the slump in consumer spending   
   and business investment, which could weaken corporate profits.   
      
   The S&P 500 index is down 8.6 per cent from its peak earlier this year.   
      
   Blue chip stocks have dropped sharply from their 2025 highs.   
      
   The losers include JPMorgan Chase (down 17 per cent); Citigroup (20 per   
   cent); Caterpillar (20 per cent); Nvidia (24 per cent); Best Buy (13 per   
   cent); Costco Wholesale (13 per cent); Intel (27 per cent) and Dell   
   Technologies (25 per cent).   
      
      
   American farmers are angry at a trade war that might cost them access to   
   export markets like Canada and Mexico that retaliate against the Trump   
   tariffs. Meanwhile, the U.S. tariffs will hike the cost of Canadian potash   
   used in almost all U.S. crop production.   
      
   “Contrary to what the president thinks, this means nothing but pain,” Aaron   
   Lehman, head of the Iowa Farmers Union, said of Trump’s trade war.   
      
   The Trump administration’s policies are “pure chaos,” Heather Boushey, who   
   served on the Biden administration’s Council of Economic Advisers, told   
   Bloomberg last week.   
      
   Trump and his advisers “have a very clear plan that will require cutting   
   support for Medicaid and other really important programs,” Boushey said.   
      
   To be charitable, in the long run Trump’s policies may bring offshored jobs   
   back to America and invigorate U.S. industries that have lost their   
   dominance to foreign rivals.   
      
   But that’s not how the tariffs in Trump’s first presidency worked out.   
      
   The American economy lost 2.7 million jobs on Trump’s earlier watch. And   
   the U.S. trade deficit increased by more than 36 per cent.   
      
   Upfront pain for promised long-term gain is the current mantra of the Trump   
   White House.   
      
   For now, at least, it is proving to be a tough sell.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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