Nobody is telling you what Trump actually did by bringing 30 CEOs to Beijing.
🚨 TRUMP DIDN'T SEND DIPLOMATS TO CHINA. HE SENT THE ENTIRE AMERICAN ECONOMY.
Jensen Huang. Tim Cook. Elon Musk. Larry Fink. Boeing. BlackRock. JPMorgan. Meta. Visa.
Not deputies. Not undersecretaries. The number one from each empire — on Air Force One — walking into Xi Jinping's room.
Nobody is talking about what that actually signals:
→ Jensen Huang was a LAST-MINUTE addition — specifically to put AI and chips on the table in person
→ This is the first U.S. presidential visit to China in nearly a decade
→ Trump's framing wasn't "we want a deal" — it was "they're here to pay respect AND do business"
→ The message: America isn't asking. America is presenting terms.
→ 100% reciprocal — or the room full of titans walks out
This isn't normal summit protocol.
Normal summits send the State Department. Normal summits send the vice president.
Trump sent the people who actually build, manufacture, invest, and deploy capital at scale — and told Xi: these are the bosses. They came here. That means something.
In 2017, Trump told Beijing he didn't blame China for exploiting weak American presidents. He blamed the presidents.
In 2026, he showed up with proof that era is over.
The media is covering the handshake.
They're NOT showing you that the most concentrated display of American private-sector power ever assembled just sat down across from the Chinese Communist Party and said: we're open — but it'll be reciprocal.
That's not diplomacy. That's leverage walking into a room and introducing itself.
I'll share more updates shortly, turn on notifications before it's too late.
@greenytrades I 100% agree with everything you’ve said, yet we still have some of the best living conditions of any country. Hopefully we can keep it that way. Day-to-day life here is amazing for most Australians.
I’ve travelled extensively, and not many places come close.
Being an everyday Aussie trying to get ahead just got 5x harder this week.
Cost of living is the highest it's ever been. Wages have barely moved relative to inflation over the past decade. Coles and Woolworths run a duopoly that sets the floor on what you pay for basic groceries and their CEOs are pulling in millions while families are genuinely choosing between the power bill and the weekly shop.
Insurance up 39%. Housing up over 400% since 1999. Most people are living paycheck to paycheck and the government's answer is a tax cut worth less than a coffee a day.
Now they've gutted negative gearing on established property and replaced the CGT discount: the two mechanisms that gave ordinary Australians a realistic path to building long-term wealth.
Their solution? "Just invest in new builds." As if that's an option when construction takes years, there's a national labour shortage in the trades, material costs are through the roof and council approvals move at the speed of a glacier. You can't redirect investor demand toward new supply that physically doesn't exist yet.
Meanwhile, bank CEOs are pulling $5 - 10M a year. Grocery executives are laughing to the quarterly earnings call and the average Australian is being told to tighten their belt while every wealth-building lever they had access to gets pulled away from them one by one.
At some point you have to stop and ask... who is the economy actually built for? Because right now it isn't built for the person working 40+ hours a week just trying to get ahead.
I have an idea.👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼
Everyone, just repost this. No tags, just repost. Imagine 1 million reposts.
I'll be happy with 2 reposts, but let's try for 1 million.
$REKT szn loading, the jobs not finished!
Any news?
@RektCoin@rektdrinks