I posted a link incase you missed it, but I was surprised to see the 10% tarrif still in place. Does anyone have a take on the deal? It's definitely above my paygrade.
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96 sats \ 1 reply \ @grayruby 23h
"Elbows up" Canadian boomers in disbelief that their hero CBDC Carney didn't get the first deal done.
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40 sats \ 0 replies \ @kepford 20h
lol. Elbows up is such a boomer thing.
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42 sats \ 0 replies \ @denlillaapan 23h
nothing; don't pay attention -- LOLZ out of the loop
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26 sats \ 1 reply \ @Jerrian_thedeep 22h
The recently announced U.S.,U.K. trade agreement marks a significant shift in transatlantic economic relations, especially in the post Brexit context. President Donald Trump has agreed to reduce tariffs on U.K. automobiles, steel, and aluminum, while the U.K. will increase purchases of American beef and streamline customs processes for U.S. goods
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28 sats \ 0 replies \ @nichro 19h
Was this chatgpt? I mean no insult just curious if my robot radar is as good as I think
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42 sats \ 0 replies \ @Solomonsatoshi 18h
Who the fuck wants to buy British cars or steel?
This will be more about aligning the UKs already sophisticated tax havens network with Trumps developing crypto safe haven network for wealthy elites who want to protect their capital wealth as China reverse engineers the global trade payments banking system via mBridge and Hong Kong.
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @Solomonsatoshi 18h
The UK is monetarily and militarily a subservient tribute state to the USA.
So are Japan, S.Korea, the EU and Australasia.
However with the exception of the UK, China is now more important as a trading partner to all of these traditional US allies.
The UK handed over its empire to the US in a fairly agreeable gentlemanly manner.
The same is unlikely to be the character of Chinas rise.
Chinas banks are not the Jewish owned ones that have financed the dominant empires of the last 5 centuries.
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