Import Tariffs: Farmers Are the Real Victims

American farmers will be the real victims of the Trump administration’s recent tariffs on certain imports. Trump has placed a 25-percent tariff on steel and a 10-percent tariff on aluminum imported from China, Canada, Mexico, and the EU, and an additional 25-percent tariff on a number of other Chinese imports. Those countries are retaliating by placing tariffs on certain American farm products.

Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said that the tariffs “are a firm statement that other nations cannot bully our agricultural producers to force the United States to cave in.”

Continuing with the irony, Trump said, in a speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, that farmers “will be the biggest beneficiary.”

It’s not clear what Trump meant by “beneficiary.” A variety of farmers will suffer as an indirect result of Trump’s tariffs. Farmers who will feel the most pain are growers of soybeans, but those who raise cotton, wheat, sorghum, cattle, hogs, legumes, nuts, and fruits, have been targeted, as well. Some of the hardest-hit farmers are in those states that supported Trump.

Now the Trump administration plans to come to the “rescue” of American farmers by offering them roughly $12 billion in government assistance. So after severely harming their livelihood, the Trump administration offers farmers relief from its own trade policy.

But the aid is not likely to be enough to fully replace the revenue lost. The damage done by the tariffs will be long-term, and won’t be repaired by a one-time or short-term patch. Smaller farmers are likely to go out of business as a result of their losses. What’s more, farmers want to farm, participate in the global economy, and contribute to the world’s food supply. Most significantly, it doesn’t make sense to attempt to punish other nations (including some of our allies) by ultimately hurting one’s own people, and then implementing a costly system to “help” them.

Senator Bob Corker (R-TN) stated it well: “You have a terrible policy (of tariffs) that sends farmers to the poorhouse, and then you put them on welfare, and we borrow the money from other countries. It’s hard to believe there isn’t an outright revolt right now in Congress.”

Does the emergency aid for farmers offer a solution or more problems? | Washington Post [2018-07-24]

Impact of Trump’s tariffs on his GOP base | Fox Business | [2018-07-24]

Donald Trump: ‘More Lies than Anybody’?

Donald Trump has uttered more than 3,000 lies since he took the oath of office, according to the Washington Post fact checker. The same source asserts that Donald Trump “makes up to nine false statements a day.”

Most of us like to think that if we were in a relationship with someone who we continually caught in lies, we’d kick them to the curb. And if that person were constantly trying to gaslight us, we might call it an abusive relationship. But Donald Trump, our leader, defies normal, healthy expectations for a relationship with his constituents – and they not only let him get away with it, they make excuses for him.

Here is a sampling of Donald Trump’s more famous lies, according to Politifact:

“We have signed more legislation than anybody. We broke the record of Harry Truman.” (The truth: The Trump administration comes in last, as far as the amount of legislation signed in the first year of office for any president since World War II.)

“We essentially repealed Obamacare because we got rid of the individual mandate … and that was a primary source of funding of Obamacare.” (The truth: the penalties for not enrolling would cover less than 3 percent of the costs of administering Obamacare. The individual mandate was only one part of Obamacare; eliminating it did not eliminate Obamacare.)

“Again, we’re the highest-taxed nation, just about, in the world.” (The truth: we’re not.)

Though a large percentage of Donald Trump’s supporters are evangelical Christians and religious leaders, the fact that so many of Trump’s untruths have been proven to be outright lies and not just misstatements doesn’t appear to trouble them at all. The truth is not their concern – as long as the items on their agenda are passed.

These days, the “family values” people – the people who largely support Trump – are the people who support rolling back the Affordable Care Act, who oppose support for law-abiding DACA recipients, and who oppose abortion while also opposing care and support for children born into poverty. Integrity and accountability are no longer seen as cornerstones for a free nation, and lying is simply a path to “Making America Great Again.”

CNN’s Jake Tapper asked GOP Senator Roy Blunt (Missouri), whether it bothered him when Trump said things that were blatantly not true.

“He communicates differently than I do,”was Blunt’s response. “I think people are much more concerned about the economy and job preparation.”

But what’s a lie (or 3,000) when things are “getting done”? In the long term, a lie, when it’s part of a series of many lies told by the leader of a country, has the potential to cause damage for not just the United States and its people, but for our allies. With all of Trump’s convolutions of the truth, how long until mistrust from the rest of the world fosters enmity, or worse? How long will it be until our allies view Donald Trump, and all of us, by association, as the collective Boy Who Cried Wolf?

Tapper to GOP senator: Do Trump’s lies bother you? | CNN [2018-05-06]

‘That’s your stink, Mr. President’: Fox News’s Neil Cavuto lets loose | Washington Post [2018-05-04]