Both @palatailim and @s22007s have similar behaviour. Both likes to create new threads Copy & Paste write about the world is going to end You two can be great buddies.
Reagan was a RHINO. He had the audacity to reject an endorsement from the KKK instead of telling them to stand back and stand by ahead of Jan 6
Microsoft halts $1 BILLION project amid rising costs from Trump's tariffs https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...an-build-data-centers-ohio-trump-tariffs.html
Reagan certainly had illustrious company concerning his take on the detrimental effects tariffs have. FORBES - Billionaire supporters of President Donald Trump—including Elon Musk—have spoken out in recent days as Trump’s sweeping tariffs have roiled global markets, expressing concern about Trump’s tariffs and their likely impact on the economy. Elon Musk: The Tesla CEO shared a video early Monday of economist Milton Friedman touting free trade and the benefits of importing goods and reportedly lobbied Trump personally not to impose the tariffs, The Washington Post reported Monday. He’s also been sparring with Trump’s top trade adviser Peter Navarro for praising tariffs—most recently saying Tuesday Navarro is a “moron” who’s “dumber than a sack of bricks”—and Musk’s brother (and Tesla board member) Kimbal Musk has criticized the tariffs as a “permanent tax” on Americans. Ken Griffin: The Citadel founder—and major Republican donor—said at an event Monday that Trump’s tariffs are a “huge policy mistake,” with Bloomberg reporting he urged audience members to lobby Trump to step back on the tariffs and said he’s “really afraid of [the U.S.] abdicating our role of leadership for the free world.” Jamie Dimon: The JPMorganChase CEO issued his annual letter to shareholders Monday morning, which expressed concerns about Trump’s tariffs, saying that while there are some “legitimate reasons” for imposing them, they “will likely increase inflation and are causing many to consider a greater probability of a recession” and expressing concerns about the continued uncertainties around Trump’s tariffs and how they will “affect America’s long-term economic alliances.” Bill Ackman: The hedge fund manager is a longtime Trump supporter but has expressed concern about the president’s tariffs, railing against Trump’s Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and how the Trump administration calculated the tariffs and calling Tuesday for the White House to issue a 30, 60 or 90-day pause on the tariffs “to enable negotiations to be completed without a major global economic disruption that will harm the most vulnerable companies and citizens of our country.” Daniel Loeb: While Loeb said in February he thought Trump’s initial tariffs on Mexico and Canada wouldn’t harm the stock market, the hedge fund manager has spoken out against Trump’s more sweeping policy, sharing a post Monday that noted the stock market chaos is “all in the head of 1 person. Who can change his mind at any time”—writing, “Exactly”—and sharing criticism of the tariffs by billionaire Ken Griffin and Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. Larry Fink: The BlackRock CEO suggested at the Economic Club of New York Monday that “the economy is weakening as we speak” and the market could fall another 20% from where it is now as a result of Trump’s tariffs, CNBC reports. Fink suggested the U.S. is “probably in a recession right now,” but he still expressed some optimism about the economy’s long-term outlook, saying, “In the long run, this is actually more of a buying opportunity than a selling opportunity” and “the vitality of the United States will persist.” Joe Lonsdale: The Palantir cofounder said on X he has some concerns about the tariffs even though he understands where “some” of the Trump administration’s thinking “is coming from,” and shared a post on tariffs from Viahart founder Molton Hart early Monday, saying Hart’s argument that the “tariffs are structured in the wrong way” by taxing finished products and components at the same rate “reflects a lot of my key concerns about how the tariffs could be done better.” Ken Langone: The Home Depot cofounder and GOP megadonor told the Financial Times he believes Trump has “been poorly advised by his advisers about this trade situation” and criticized how the tariffs were calculated—saying, “I don’t understand the goddamn formula”—telling the FT it would have been “more manageable and certainly more constructive” for the Trump administration to impose baseline 10% tariffs on foreign imports before starting negotiations. Ray Dalio: Dalio, who runs the world’s biggest hedge fund firm, Bridgewater Associates, wrote Monday the tariffs are based on a broader “breakdown of the major monetary, political, and geopolitical orders.” He’s still expressed concern about Trump’s tariffs and their “practicality,” however, telling CNBC on Tuesday that while he “agree with the problem” the tariffs are aimed at fixing, “I am very concerned about the solution.” Stanley Druckenmiller: Longtime hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller expressed some optimism about tariffs in an interview with CNBC, referring to them as the “lesser of two evils” versus an income tax—though an unverified social media account believed to belong to Druckenmiller responded to a clip of his interview Sunday, arguing he “do[es] not support tariffs exceeding 10%.” Ken Fisher: The Fisher Investments chairman attacked Trump’s tariffs Monday, saying on X the tariff plan is “stupid, wrong, arrogantly extreme, ignorant trade-wise and addressing a non-problem with misguided tools,” predicting it “will fade and fail.” Musk’s brother Kimbal Musk called Trump “the most high tax American President in generations” on Monday. “Through his tariff strategy, Trump has implemented a structural, permanent tax on the American consumer,” the Tesla shareholder said on X. https://www.forbes.com/sites/alison...t-against-trumps-tariffs-huge-policy-mistake/
JPMorgan has raised the chances of a global recession to 60% by the year’s end, from 40%, if Trump carries out the full plan he laid out last week. “The tariff hikes since the start of the Trump administration now amount to the largest US tax hike in nearly 60 years,” the bank’s economists said in a note last week. “This would have direct ramifications on household and business spending and ripple effects through retaliation, a slide in business sentiment, and supply chain disruptions.” American consumers will pay $2,100 more a year on average because of Trump’s tariffs, the nonpartisan Tax Foundation says. https://edition.cnn.com/2025/04/09/...-trump-reciprocal-tariffs-hnk-intl/index.html
I agree with many of the sentiments shared in this post about Ronald Reagan’s character and approach to leadership. He truly believed in the power of unity and treating others with respect, regardless of political differences. His understanding of economics, especially his experiences during the Great Depression, shaped his approach to tariffs and trade in a way that prioritized caution and balance.
yes actually the majority of sane americans love what is going on and there is talk of a trump kingdom, where the family can just stay in power forever - ultimately giving reparations to the blacks by awarding white liberals as slaves to them. most us trump voters are on board with it, if trump will also neuter the slaves.
I totally agree. I think a lot of his innate decency came from his real and true self confidence. If you really know who you are, there is no need for constant empty boasting, arrogant pretension and a permanent need to put others down just so you can feel better about yourself. No, he knew who he was and what he had, so just put his honesty, talents, amazing charisma and ability to make people feel better about themselves to the best possible use, not for himself but for others, trying to leave the US and maybe even the world in a bit of a better place after his Presidency, than he found it coming to office the first time.