UNCONSTITUTIONAL


Our Founding Fathers Rejected
FREE TRADE And So Should We


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Industrial Real Estate Shifts Inland Due to New Trade Patterns

Shifting global trade patterns and cost pressures are reshaping industrial real estate demand across North America, with logistics users increasingly moving large-scale distribution activity away from coastal port markets and toward lower-cost inland logistics hubs. This is according to a new report from Cushman & Wakefield, “North America Ports & Trade Update: 2025 in Review.” … Read More

Beer tax break for American brewers acts like a tariff on foreign-made beer

Support for a proposal to reduce the excise tax on American-made beer but not on foreign-made beer provides an interesting juxtaposition on the tariff debate. One of the main arguments against the United States imposing tariffs is that other countries retaliate with their own tariffs, which impacts exports of American-made goods. One could argue that … Read More

Colombia Raises Steel Tariffs 35% to Shield Local Industry

Colombia raised steel import tariffs to 35% on products from China, Russia, Turkey and India to protect its domestic industry, which represents 10% of industrial GDP and supports 45,000 jobs plus 25,000 suppliers. The one-year measure mirrors Mexico’s permanent tariff extension on Asian steel imports, as both countries respond to regional oversupply concerns with Asian … Read More

America Can Afford Higher Taxes. The Tariffs Prove It

If the Trump administration’s tariff policy has proved anything, it’s that corporate America can afford to pay higher tax rates without the disruptions that Republican devotees of supply-side economics always say are inevitable. The duties — paid by importers and either absorbed by them or passed on to customers — brought the US Treasury around … Read More

$15B down, $29B to go — USDA unveils new ag trade deficit projections

The U.S. ag trade deficit continues to move in the right direction, according to new numbers from USDA. While the overall number is still massive, the latest forecast predicts 2026’s deficit to fall to $29 billion. That’s $8 billion less than USDA’s projections from December, and $14.7 billion lower than last year. It’s welcome news … Read More

Japan Is Finally Removing A Massive Barrier To American-Made Cars

Japan plans a new certification pathway for US-built vehicles. It will admit US-certified cars without extra testing in Japan. Toyota has said it wants to import three US models into Japan. Last fall, President Trump announced Japan was working to allow American-made vehicles into the country and to accept US safety certifications without additional testing. … Read More

Who Is Paying the Trump Tariffs?

But who is, in fact, paying the Trump tariffs? Two reports released last week — the Congressional Budget Office’s latest report on the budget and economic outlook, and a study released by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York — both concluded that the tariffs are overwhelmingly being borne by U.S. households and firms. But … Read More

Govt to seal US trade deal on Monday to reduce tariff

Bangladesh has pledged to buy American aircraft from Boeing, along with greater quantities of cotton, soybeans, liquefied petroleum gas and other goods to reduce the trade gap with the US. An agreement has been signed to import 3.5 million tonnes of wheat from America over five years, with approximately 660,000 tonnes already purchased. The arrangement … Read More

In exiting Japan, John Deere building $70M factory in North Carolina

John Deere future generation excavators previously produced in Japan will be manufactured at a $70 million factory in North Carolina, the company said Tuesday. Kernersville, a Forsyth County community off Interstate 40 between Greensboro and Winston-Salem, will be the new home with an expected employment of 150 workers. In May 2024, county commissioners approved an … Read More