Trump Is Making Great, Great Again?

even if Trump’s push to establish authoritarian rule is defeated, it will take many years to recover what we’ve lost.”

I have been thinking of this all along. Domestically? Tr_mp has been breaking the nations gains down. What comes to mind is reducing the minimum wage for federal contractors, rolling back rules that strengthening overtime protections, freezing federal grant funding, stripping Temporary Protected Status, deporting some US citizens without due process, removed diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) directives from the military, withholding congressionally appropriated funds, imposed tariffs, etc.

100 ways Trump hurt workers in his first 100 days, Economic Policy Institute. There is a numbness to all of what Tr_mp has done in his six months in the presidency. It will take years to fix what he has weakened and broken.

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How Trump Is Making China Great

Why we’re going to lose the trade war, and much more besides.

Now Trump is learning, to his obvious shock, that other nations can also play trade hardball. His reaction to China’s new export controls on rare earths, which are crucial to digital technology, would be comical if the stakes weren’t so high:

Gosh. Aggressive unilateral trade action is a “moral disgrace.” Who knew?

There is, however, one big difference between Trump’s trade policy and China’s. Namely, the Chinese appear to know what they’re doing.

It should have been obvious from the beginning that if America were to get into a full-scale trade war with China, the Chinese would have the upper hand. For one thing, in real terms China has the bigger economy:

Furthermore, while our economies are interdependent, America is more vulnerable to a rupture than China is. True, Chinese industry has relied to an important degree on sales to the United States. But the U.S. economy is dependent on China for critical inputs, above all those rare earths. And here’s the thing: China can quickly compensate, at least in part, for the loss of the U.S. export market by stimulating domestic demand. Given time, America could wean itself from dependence on Chinese inputs — but doing so would take years.

That said, a year ago the United States still had some important advantages over China. Although China has made great strides in science and technology, America still had a commanding position, thanks in large part to our unmatched research establishment, our great research universities, and our ability — thanks in large part to the openness of our society — to recruit talent from all over the world.

OK, you know what’s coming: Since taking office, Trump and his minions have been systematically demolishing each of these pillars of U.S. strength.

Furthermore, just looking at the overall numbers, drastic as they are, understates the severity of the assault on science, for two reasons.