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The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

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Come On You Irons
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The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Come On You Irons »

There. Resident WHO political commentators and gurus can knock yourselves out in here and conduct your endless bickering. All other threads will be locked.
Nutsin
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Nutsin »

goose wrote: 12 Apr 2025, 18:55 Apple, Nvidia Score Relief From US Tariffs With Exemptions


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... al-tariffs

more backtracking…….
Cha Ching!
Mr Anon
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Mr Anon »

goose wrote: 12 Apr 2025, 18:55 Apple, Nvidia Score Relief From US Tariffs With Exemptions


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... al-tariffs

more backtracking…….
It's almost like He's making it up as he goes along. 🤔
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goose
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post goose »

Apple, Nvidia Score Relief From US Tariffs With Exemptions


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... al-tariffs

more backtracking…….
Monsieur merde de cheval
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Monsieur merde de cheval »

Pull up a sandbag and Ill tell you a tale or 2..

I struggle to structure a sentence let alone a paragraph ..
but I speak from the HEART .

 
Monsieur merde de cheval
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Monsieur merde de cheval »

Manuel wrote: 11 Apr 2025, 06:42 How much longer before everyone just becomes completely bored with fucking tariffs in the news, if not already? There's only so long that fucking tariffs can be newsworthy surely, the average Joe doesn't give a fuck. 

Why the fuck would anyone put there money in the States now, absolute fucking shit show. You have to wonder where Trump's advisors are (people that actually have a clue and at least half a fucking brain) or does he just ignore them? if so, why have any. Shame he wasn't killed.
Imagine if Donald was JOE.

 stumbling and mumbling his way through a CHARADE .
Monsieur merde de cheval
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Monsieur merde de cheval »

I don't want MUSLIMS in a CHRISTIAN LAND.

ENDEX
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zebthecat
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post zebthecat »

, wrote: 11 Apr 2025, 10:08 Sydney, the Duck’s power is because the Senate and Congress are both majority Republican. More often than not this is not the case and the mid term elections might change the balance such that one house changes its majority and if the incumbent is felt to be making a horlicks of things both houses change to democrats. Quite often Presidents have faced terms where Senate and Congress have been of the opposition and they just get on with it.

When considering power look at the position Starmer is in whereby he has a massive HoC majority and yet only about a third of the electorate voted for him. A situation that is not at all representative of how the UK voted.
That is because FPTP is predicated on there being a two party system.
Any more than two parties makes parliament inherently unrepresentative of the electorate's views.
Theoretically MPs are meant to represent all their constituents but party politics always wns out in the end.
,
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post , »

Sydney, the Duck’s power is because the Senate and Congress are both majority Republican. More often than not this is not the case and the mid term elections might change the balance such that one house changes its majority and if the incumbent is felt to be making a horlicks of things both houses change to democrats. Quite often Presidents have faced terms where Senate and Congress have been of the opposition and they just get on with it.

When considering power look at the position Starmer is in whereby he has a massive HoC majority and yet only about a third of the electorate voted for him. A situation that is not at all representative of how the UK voted.
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Manuel
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Manuel »

How much longer before everyone just becomes completely bored with fucking tariffs in the news, if not already? There's only so long that fucking tariffs can be newsworthy surely, the average Joe doesn't give a fuck. 

Why the fuck would anyone put there money in the States now, absolute fucking shit show. You have to wonder where Trump's advisors are (people that actually have a clue and at least half a fucking brain) or does he just ignore them? if so, why have any. Shame he wasn't killed.
Sydney_Iron
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Sydney_Iron »

90 days pause on Tariffs from the Orange man! what's the odds we get nowhere near 90 days before he changes his mind again? blokes flip flopping all over the place! Still can't believe the Septic's tell us how free they are compared to the rest of the world, yet once a President (1 person with more power than any other democratically elected PM or similar) is elected that's it for 4 years, at least if the British,Canadian or Australian PM behaved like this, he/she would be replaced quick smart by their own party.

And fucks knows what to believe in the media, both sides are biased to fuck, Trump has either got the Chinese on the ropes with this tariff nonsense or he capitulated because of them. WTF

Tariff situation maybe does need addressing, just not sure the Trump version of a pissed off Bull in a China shop is the best way forward? He also seems to have put a good portion of friendly countries offside as well including Australia who so far have given him a bit of a "meh" won't respond with tariffs of our own and a bit pissed at how we are being treated, given the USA exports more to us that we send to them, Trump has also gone quiet on his claims that Australia bans beef from the USA, turns out that's BS, whist we will accept imports from the USA, due to bio security restriction we don't accept meat from ANY country if its sourced from a 3rd party. 

Agriculture department confirms US beef not banned in Australia - ABC NewsThe Australian Department of Agriculture has confirmed there is no ban on importing United States beef."Import conditions into Australia are currently available for beef products sourced from cattle born, raised and slaughtered in the United States (US)," a department statement read."However, the US has not commenced trade under these terms and has requested to expand its access to include beef products sourced from cattle from Mexico and Canada and legally imported into the US for export to Australia.

 
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zebthecat
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post zebthecat »

Trump's Liz Truss impression.
As Margaret Thatcher said you can't buck the markets.Muach as I disgreed with her a lot she was right here.
A protracted USA/China would hurt both countries of course and tech expecially with their long and complicated supply chains. Just take an iPhone - processors and glass made in the USA, screens in South Korea, other chips, accelerometers and the rest from wherever made using rare earths from China, DRC etc and all assembled mostly in China.
I am not that Trump does complication given the dumb formula used to calculate the tariffs (which are unilateral btw) in the first place.
 
Mr Anon
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Mr Anon »

Nutsin crying over his further 7% slide on the market. How much you down now mate?


Winning!
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SurfaceAgentX2Zero
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post SurfaceAgentX2Zero »

It's almost like cash, gold, commodities and non-US$ denominated instruments don't exist...
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goose
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post goose »

Nutsin wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 14:57
goose wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 14:26
Nutsin wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 14:03
US imports are below 15%  of US GDP. Not much at all. So any increase on goods from China or anywhere else won’t have a profound effect on US Inflation. Speaking of Inflation, data came out today and inflation is down, Lower than expected, how about them apples! Trump has managed to finally bring down inflation something that Bidenomics couldn’t do. Some much needed relief for the consumer.

Goose  as for the 10yr T bill , I think you will find the yield on the 10 yr was higher in Jan than it was yesterday. 

A word to the wise, you buy when there is blood on the streets ( fully paid only if you are trading) sounds like poor old Goose sells at the bottom and buys the top.

You can expect continued volatility but at some point this market is gonna take off like a scalded dog with its tail on fire.

China is looking for alliances, Australia already told them no. If China tries to dump its treasuries it will hurt itself and cause even more harm to its own economy.


China is gonna feel the pain more than anyone. In the mean time the US will re negotiate trade with all the countries that did not retaliate first. So at then end of it all the Tarrifs and trade barriers go away so the US can gain access to other markets.

You might be able to afford a Tesla soon Goose, Good eh!
"So any increase on goods from China or anywhere else won’t have a profound effect on US Inflation"
That simply isn't true. If it were true then none of the markets wouldn't have reacted they way they did and Trump wouldn't have had to row back on his tariffs.

The issue with the bond market was the sell-off, why do you think there was a rush to sell bonds that are usually considered a 'safe haven'?

Poor old goose is doing just fine thanks for your concern - you have some weird need for validation on here.
And no thanks I don't want a Tesla, much rather stick with European cars. If there's one things Americans do not have, its is style.
People sell bonds to move in to equities Goose. They move from risk off to risk on assets when they see a change.
You said it’s because the yields on the 10 yr were moving up to 5%, the yield was at its highest on Jan 13th, before Trump took office, didn’t see any panic then.

The scaremongering and politicking have caused a lot of harm and has caused a lot of fuckwits to sell the bottom, some of it intentional.

We have the US meeting with Iran this weekend, something else that could set the cat amongst the pigeons for markets, so we will see how that plays out. 

Feds are holding a meeting so we will see if they lower rates.

Bottom line is you are all over the place clutching at anything you can find to save face and the beauty of it all is the more you dig, the deeper the hole and you haven’t figured that out yet! I wonder who will strike the first deal, Israel? Taiwan? Argentina? S Korea? Japan? 
 

And there you were in full show, gloating cos for a split second you thought you could come on here and call me out because the market was selling off, just before the reversal……. Ag ag ag ag! What a cսnt!
You think people were selling bonds to buy equities when the market was crashing?? lol

Feel free to point out where I said "it’s because the yields on the 10 yr were moving up to 5%", Looks like you're getting me mixed up with some expert on Fox News.

'Liberation Day' I said:

Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)
goose  03 Apr 2025 08:10
Let's see how the markets - especially the bond market - reacts to 'liberation day'.

and guess what happened? The bond market showed what it thought of the tariffs and Trump had to row back on his tariffs.
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Nutsin »

goose wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 14:26
Nutsin wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 14:03
goose wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 10:07 US imports from China were about 20% of total imports when Trump was first in office and have now come down to something like 15%. Both Trump & Biden imposed tariffs on China, so you could say they are already working. Although apparently China has got around this by just re-routing through other asian countries.

If you look at the $400 odd billion of US imports from China, about one third is computers/smartphones/electronic devices. These things have very complicated supply chains and production processes. You cannot just whack a 100% tariff on them overnight and expect the US to suddenly produce this stuff themselves.
US imports are below 15%  of US GDP. Not much at all. So any increase on goods from China or anywhere else won’t have a profound effect on US Inflation. Speaking of Inflation, data came out today and inflation is down, Lower than expected, how about them apples! Trump has managed to finally bring down inflation something that Bidenomics couldn’t do. Some much needed relief for the consumer.

Goose  as for the 10yr T bill , I think you will find the yield on the 10 yr was higher in Jan than it was yesterday. 

A word to the wise, you buy when there is blood on the streets ( fully paid only if you are trading) sounds like poor old Goose sells at the bottom and buys the top.

You can expect continued volatility but at some point this market is gonna take off like a scalded dog with its tail on fire.

China is looking for alliances, Australia already told them no. If China tries to dump its treasuries it will hurt itself and cause even more harm to its own economy.


China is gonna feel the pain more than anyone. In the mean time the US will re negotiate trade with all the countries that did not retaliate first. So at then end of it all the Tarrifs and trade barriers go away so the US can gain access to other markets.

You might be able to afford a Tesla soon Goose, Good eh!
"So any increase on goods from China or anywhere else won’t have a profound effect on US Inflation"
That simply isn't true. If it were true then none of the markets wouldn't have reacted they way they did and Trump wouldn't have had to row back on his tariffs.

The issue with the bond market was the sell-off, why do you think there was a rush to sell bonds that are usually considered a 'safe haven'?

Poor old goose is doing just fine thanks for your concern - you have some weird need for validation on here.
And no thanks I don't want a Tesla, much rather stick with European cars. If there's one things Americans do not have, its is style.
People sell bonds to move in to equities Goose. They move from risk off to risk on assets when they see a change.
You said it’s because the yields on the 10 yr were moving up to 5%, the yield was at its highest on Jan 13th, before Trump took office, didn’t see any panic then.

The scaremongering and politicking have caused a lot of harm and has caused a lot of fuckwits to sell the bottom, some of it intentional.

We have the US meeting with Iran this weekend, something else that could set the cat amongst the pigeons for markets, so we will see how that plays out. 

Feds are holding a meeting so we will see if they lower rates.

Bottom line is you are all over the place clutching at anything you can find to save face and the beauty of it all is the more you dig, the deeper the hole and you haven’t figured that out yet! I wonder who will strike the first deal, Israel? Taiwan? Argentina? S Korea? Japan? 
 

And there you were in full show, gloating cos for a split second you thought you could come on here and call me out because the market was selling off, just before the reversal……. Ag ag ag ag! What a cսnt!
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goose
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post goose »

Nutsin wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 14:03
goose wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 10:07 US imports from China were about 20% of total imports when Trump was first in office and have now come down to something like 15%. Both Trump & Biden imposed tariffs on China, so you could say they are already working. Although apparently China has got around this by just re-routing through other asian countries.

If you look at the $400 odd billion of US imports from China, about one third is computers/smartphones/electronic devices. These things have very complicated supply chains and production processes. You cannot just whack a 100% tariff on them overnight and expect the US to suddenly produce this stuff themselves.
US imports are below 15%  of US GDP. Not much at all. So any increase on goods from China or anywhere else won’t have a profound effect on US Inflation. Speaking of Inflation, data came out today and inflation is down, Lower than expected, how about them apples! Trump has managed to finally bring down inflation something that Bidenomics couldn’t do. Some much needed relief for the consumer.

Goose  as for the 10yr T bill , I think you will find the yield on the 10 yr was higher in Jan than it was yesterday. 

A word to the wise, you buy when there is blood on the streets ( fully paid only if you are trading) sounds like poor old Goose sells at the bottom and buys the top.

You can expect continued volatility but at some point this market is gonna take off like a scalded dog with its tail on fire.

China is looking for alliances, Australia already told them no. If China tries to dump its treasuries it will hurt itself and cause even more harm to its own economy.


China is gonna feel the pain more than anyone. In the mean time the US will re negotiate trade with all the countries that did not retaliate first. So at then end of it all the Tarrifs and trade barriers go away so the US can gain access to other markets.

You might be able to afford a Tesla soon Goose, Good eh!
"So any increase on goods from China or anywhere else won’t have a profound effect on US Inflation"
That simply isn't true. If it were true then none of the markets wouldn't have reacted they way they did and Trump wouldn't have had to row back on his tariffs.

The issue with the bond market was the sell-off, why do you think there was a rush to sell bonds that are usually considered a 'safe haven'?

Poor old goose is doing just fine thanks for your concern - you have some weird need for validation on here.
And no thanks I don't want a Tesla, much rather stick with European cars. If there's one things Americans do not have, its is style.
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Nutsin »

goose wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 10:07 US imports from China were about 20% of total imports when Trump was first in office and have now come down to something like 15%. Both Trump & Biden imposed tariffs on China, so you could say they are already working. Although apparently China has got around this by just re-routing through other asian countries.

If you look at the $400 odd billion of US imports from China, about one third is computers/smartphones/electronic devices. These things have very complicated supply chains and production processes. You cannot just whack a 100% tariff on them overnight and expect the US to suddenly produce this stuff themselves.
US imports are below 15%  of US GDP. Not much at all. So any increase on goods from China or anywhere else won’t have a profound effect on US Inflation. Speaking of Inflation, data came out today and inflation is down, Lower than expected, how about them apples! Trump has managed to finally bring down inflation something that Bidenomics couldn’t do. Some much needed relief for the consumer.

Goose  as for the 10yr T bill , I think you will find the yield on the 10 yr was higher in Jan than it was yesterday. 

A word to the wise, you buy when there is blood on the streets ( fully paid only if you are trading) sounds like poor old Goose sells at the bottom and buys the top.

You can expect continued volatility but at some point this market is gonna take off like a scalded dog with its tail on fire.

China is looking for alliances, Australia already told them no. If China tries to dump its treasuries it will hurt itself and cause even more harm to its own economy.


China is gonna feel the pain more than anyone. In the mean time the US will re negotiate trade with all the countries that did not retaliate first. So at then end of it all the Tarrifs and trade barriers go away so the US can gain access to other markets.

You might be able to afford a Tesla soon Goose, Good eh!
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post Nutsin »

Sydney_Iron wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 10:00 Massive suckers rally today🤣 all the knicker wetter's going pilling on in on the Orange man's comments, can't see it looks like the Chinese that forced his hand, them being the biggest holders of US government bonds..................

This has only just begun, plenty of volatility ahead, wonder if Trump is regretting opening this can of worms?????
Japan are the highest holders of US Treasuries, not China.
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post goose »

Sounds like a national emergency to me.
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SurfaceAgentX2Zero
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post SurfaceAgentX2Zero »

goose wrote: 10 Apr 2025, 10:07 US imports from China were about 20% of total imports when Trump was first in office and have now come down to something like 15%. Both Trump & Biden imposed tariffs on China, so you could say they are already working. Although apparently China has got around this by just re-routing through other asian countries.

If you look at the $400 odd billion of US imports from China, about one third is computers/smartphones/electronic devices. These things have very complicated supply chains and production processes. You cannot just whack a 100% tariff on them overnight and expect the US to suddenly produce this stuff themselves.
To be fair Goose, the US will not come to a standstill overnight if it becomes expensive to upgrade your smartphone for a year.

Obviously, though, Gen Z will absolutely shit its pants at this prospect
dealcanvey
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post dealcanvey »

Must be mad to hedge your bets on anything Trump says or does. Simply cannot be trusted. Proves it time and time again. What a shit show.

Was quite funny the way he was backing down because everyone else was getting jittery apart from himself of course.

The powerplay with China and tariff hikes is now going to be purely down to Trumps ego and nothing more. 
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Re: The Official Politics Thread (enter at your own risk)

Post goose »

US imports from China were about 20% of total imports when Trump was first in office and have now come down to something like 15%. Both Trump & Biden imposed tariffs on China, so you could say they are already working. Although apparently China has got around this by just re-routing through other asian countries.

If you look at the $400 odd billion of US imports from China, about one third is computers/smartphones/electronic devices. These things have very complicated supply chains and production processes. You cannot just whack a 100% tariff on them overnight and expect the US to suddenly produce this stuff themselves.
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