Today's The Economic Times paper carries this cartoon.

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by sridhga, May 1, 2025 at 3:06 AM.

  1. sridhga

    sridhga

    An Army officer meets a politician and states that Tariff wars ruin economies while real wars boost economies. Something to ponder about? Does this remind you of post WWII growth in the US economy?
     
    Last edited: May 1, 2025 at 3:24 AM
  2. Peter8519

    Peter8519

  3. Tariff wars, real wars..USA is no longer capable of running any kind of wars...it was all paid for with Printed money..all the consumer purchasing of chinese gadgets and consumer goods..all paid for by printed monopoly money..all the forever wars and DOD equipment..all printed phoney money.

    Right now..if your long and still buying this overvalued paper...you will get fcked hard..its becoming obvious is just a shill game for the Low IQ
     
    sridhga likes this.
  4. RedDuke

    RedDuke

    World was in shambles after WW2 while America was not affected thus such dominance. Will not happen again.
     
    beginner66, sridhga and newwurldmn like this.
  5. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    This Cartoon, where?
     
  6. zdreg

    zdreg

    sridhga likes this.
  7. zdreg

    zdreg

    That is the game traders play. I is called musical chairs.
     
  8. sridhga

    sridhga

    Tariff wars vs actual wars.png



    The Economic Times newspaper. Published from Mumbai.
     
    zdreg and SunTrader like this.
  9. mervyn

    mervyn

    • Amazon-backed Anthropic said that Chinese smuggling tactics involved chips hidden in “prosthetic baby bumps” and “packed alongside live lobsters.”
    • Nvidia blasted Anthropic Thursday in a rare public clash over artificial intelligencepolicy with U.S. chip export restrictionsset to take effect.
    • “American firms should focus on innovation and rise to the challenge, rather than tell tall tales that large, heavy, and sensitive electronics are somehow smuggled in ‘baby bumps’ or ‘alongside live lobsters,’ ” a spokesperson for Nvidia said.
    • Anthropic, the AI startup backed by billions from Amazon, argued for tighter controls and enforcement, saying in a blog post Wednesday that Chinese smugglingtactics involved chips hidden in “prosthetic baby bumps” and “packed alongside live lobsters.”
     
  10. This week's The Economist cartoon:

    [​IMG]

    Last week's:

    [​IMG]

    They always get it right.
     
    zdreg likes this.