Comment by caminante

Comment by caminante 4 days ago

16 replies

> I don't think it's really disputed that high inflation is on the horizon

This is moving the goalpost because you know economists (the critics) forecasted major inflation sooner/now, and it hasn't happened.

> Care to list those? [...] it assumes that we're already in the position of being an export based economy which we're not and not tangibly working towards.

You're not making sense or making coherent thoughts. The US is still the #2 exporting country in the world in absolute terms despite importing a relatively higher amount.

hypeatei 4 days ago

> This is moving the goalpost because you know economists (the critics) forecasted major inflation sooner/now

Yes, because no one expected him to chicken out as hard as he did. It also came out that people in his cabinet (specifically Howard Lutnick) were betting against tariffs while simultaneously advocating for them. The legal opinion is heavily leaning towards them being illegal after many lower court decisions. Do you care to explain how tariffs wouldn't be inflationary if the actions matched the rhetoric?

> The US is still the #2 exporting country

Are you being intentionally obtuse? Look at how much we import vs how much we export. What would you call an economy that imports more than it exports? A ___ based economy?

  • caminante 4 days ago

    > Do you care to explain how tariffs wouldn't be inflationary if the actions matched the rhetoric?

    It's like you're asking people to explain something that happened as if there's no explanation beyond your hatred of Trump. Why do you choose to dismiss drivers like stockpiling inventory, increased USMCA compliance, broader economic offsets (AI/tech boom, energy production) that could explain how tariffs aren't necessarily inflationary?

    > Look at how much we import vs how much we export. What would you call an economy that imports more...

    You ask this as if I didn't say the US imports more than it exports.

    • hypeatei 4 days ago

      > Why do you choose to dismiss drivers like stockpiling inventory, increased USMCA compliance, broader economic offsets (AI/tech boom, energy production)

      Okay, so you're admitting that they're inflationary but choose to rattle off a list of random stuff that somehow, magically, offsets the increased costs from tariffs. Please go into detail on one of those, including what you're talking about (e.g. what is "increased USCMA compliance"?)

      AI datacenters have increased energy costs in the localities where they're based and raised memory prices by eating up all the supply.

      > You ask this as if I didn't say the US imports more than it exports.

      So.. you were agreeing with my point then? I don't understand why you'd call my thoughts "not coherent" then agree with it.

      • caminante 4 days ago

        > Okay, so you're admitting that they're inflationary but choose to rattle off a list of random stuff that somehow, magically, offsets the increased costs from tariffs.

        Haha! I haven't seen someone try to dismiss counterarguments as "magic." I should've said that more when I got answers wrong on my tests in high school.

        > So.. you were agreeing with my point then?

        If not "magic," then the objector "actually agrees" with you.