@meltingbutterss@EmmanuelMacron You're totally right, America's first. You have bigger issues to deal with. Internal war:
Mass shootings on the rise
There have been more than 488 mass shootings across the US so far in 2024, according to the Gun Violence Archive
reciprocity is a beautiful idea, but in its purest form, it assumes that all nations start from the same point on the game board. they don’t. the world isn’t a chess match where each player has an identical set of pieces. it’s poker—where some players sit down with stacks of chips and others are all-in from the start.
tariffs, subsidies, and trade barriers aren’t just numbers on a spreadsheet. they are the manifestation of history. of wars fought, debts unpaid, alliances formed in fire, and economic miracles that came from a single moment of desperation. japan and germany rebuilt after world war ii under the umbrella of american security. china rose by leveraging the rules of the system the u.s. created. europe developed a high-tax, high-benefit model because of a cultural and historical trajectory that saw kings, revolutions, and the specter of war within living memory.
if trade were truly reciprocal, then history would have to be erased. the subsidies the u.s. gave to its own industries, the military protection extended to allies, the preferential access granted to developing economies—would all have to be unwound. the problem with this vision of fairness is that it ignores the asymmetry of the past. it assumes that the game began today.
alexander hamilton, in his “report on manufactures,” understood that young nations need protection to grow. he knew that free trade between a fully industrialized britain and an agrarian america wasn’t fair—it was a death sentence for u.s. industry. but when does protectionism stop being a ladder and start becoming a crutch? when does a nation move from “developing” to “fully developed”?
the genius of trade is not in its balance, but in its imbalance. the u.s. runs deficits because the dollar is the world’s reserve currency, and demand for it is endless. foreign nations send goods to the u.s., and the u.s. pays in dollars—dollars that often come back as investment in u.s. assets. this is not a flaw; it is the design. trade surpluses are not inherently good, just as deficits are not inherently bad.
perhaps the real question is not whether other nations should drop their tariffs but whether the u.s. should reimagine its own strategy altogether. does it double down on economic nationalism and pull its industries back home, accepting higher costs in the process? or does it use its structural advantages—its control over global finance, technology, and energy—to shape the rules in a way that no tariff ever could?
reciprocity is a starting point, not a solution. history proves that fairness in trade is rarely about simple math—it’s about leverage, vision, and the ability to see the board for what it truly is.
@idrissaberkane@ThierryBreton J'aime pas. Je ne comprends pas. Comment des gens qui n'ont que la foi a la bouche, qui se bousculent a l'église, qui ne font pas une phrase sans les mots prier et dieu. Ont si peu de compassion pour un migrant. Leur seule bataille c'est l'immigration ?
@idrissaberkane Wouaaaaa... @idrissaberkane pourquoi avoir fait ce post? Les gens s'expriment et croient que ce gars étaient un bon français. Si ils savaient qu'il a bâti le FN avec un milicien collabo et un vafen-ss... bref.
@wincetti @TopFancfc@DAZNBoxing@Turki_alalshikh Don't get me wrong. Usyk is a highly skilled boxer. He deserve the win tonight. Even if the fight was boring.
@TopFancfc@DAZNBoxing@Turki_alalshikh Dubois did it. With a clean body shot from which Usyk got 7 minutes to rest. First time I saw this in 30 years + watching boxing.