Our China problem.

You Tell Me Texas w/Paul GleiserOur China problem

Wall Street is breathing a sigh of relief over the 90-day pause that the Trump administration has announced regarding the sky-high tariffs he imposed on China several weeks ago. Markets have largely recovered. Your 401(k) looks better. Recession talk has faded.

All good.

If the optimistic statements of the administration pan out, perhaps a deal gets done with China that corrects some of the massive imbalance in trade between us and them.

All good there, too.

But the China problem is far from solved. As we learned during the pandemic, our economy is dangerously tethered to China. Take a minute and close your eyes and remember the empty lots at car dealerships in 2021 and 2022. Those lots were empty because there were thousands of cars fully assembled sitting on assembly plant holding lots that couldn’t be delivered for the want of a microchip or some other component that comes from China – a country that was shut down over the very pandemic that it unleashed upon the world.

Though it gave the markets a momentary case of the vapors, and though it gave Democrats something about which to hyperventilate, Trump’s fusillade of tariffs – all of them ultimately aimed at China, make no mistake – has finally opened the eyes of thinking, discerning Americans to the fact that the United States is dangerously dependent upon a hostile, malfeasant regime for even its most basic needs.

We’re coming to understand that having store shelves filled with cheaper consumer goods may be nice for right now, but those goods aren’t so cheap when you factor in the long-term impact on our national wealth.

Our political and corporate elites are quite happy to pacify us with the savings attendant to buying things made using slave labor (while simultaneously pocketing the fatter profits). Thus pacified, most of us haven’t noticed the trillions of dollars of national wealth transferred to a hostile strategic adversary, or the empty downtowns and vacant shopping malls of once thriving cities and towns in the American heartland that lost the manufacturing jobs that once supported their local economies.

Today if China were to start a war someplace against an ally of ours, we’d find ourselves rendered impotent by China’s threat of an embargo on an entire galaxy of parts and components to keep our economy running, parts and components that our elite corporate titans – aided and abetted by the elite globalists that populate our government – profitably outsourced to China. (And try not to think about a blockade on antibiotics, for which we are dependent upon China to the tune of about 95 percent. That prospect is simply too frightening.)

Plain and simple, American business has a China addiction. The proceeds attendant to feeding that addiction are funding an expansionist, hostile Chinese military. Our dependence on Chinese manufacturing is a latter-day Sword of Damocles of our own making.

Trump’s tariff barrage constitutes a long overdue awakening to that danger and the immediate necessity of dealing with it on our own terms – while so doing is still possible.

Paul Gleiser

Paul L. Gleiser is president of ATW Media, LLC, licensee of radio stations KTBB 97.5 FM/AM600, 92.1 The TEAM FM in Tyler-Longview, Texas.

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7 Responses

  1. C.C. Parks says:

    If, that hypothetical IF, I wanted to sue a party, in ( some US/USA/TEXAS locality), which Law Firm will NOT back down, nor play footsies with Constitutional matters -Protect, Defend, Preserve the Constitution, without prejudice, nor waste MY time with compartmentalized BS ? Aren’t they ALL by their very LICENSE, immediately duty bound to ASSIST Criminal and/or civil ? I have an unperfected petition of protest and notice of Appeal pending, do NOT see an expiration date in the Ninth amendment. Which Tyler/East Texas Firm is up to the task ?
    Paul Gleiser: Next Time you fill in for Jimmy Fallah, give me some notice please

  2. Jean Bammel says:

    So true. We have let the China problem go on far too long. Anything Mr. Trump can do to turn the Chinese tide back has to happen and I think Mr. Trump and his team can do it. We need the citizens of the US to support Mr. Trump and his team. The US has been going the wrong way far too long.

  3. Dang Vorbei says:

    I profoundly regret supporting globalism under Bush I. At the time I thought it would encourage companies to reduce the chokehold of leftists in big unions that were driving production overseas by demanding that rookie workers received $50 / hour for unskilled work. Well, that was wrong, and we should’ve handled that issue much, much differently. We can reduce the things that unions do to make domestic manufacturing insufferable to industry without gutting American know-how and our national work ethic.

  4. Linda E. Montrose says:

    It brings the “MADE IN AMERICA” slogan to a whole new level worth a good look! My Granny worked for a company in the late forties and early fifties that made work clothes like overalls and work shirts for men called TUFFNUT. I was just a baby then but she used to tell me about it. These were times that that MADE IN AMERICA actually meant something. Sometimes it is best to take a look at what is productive for US and this COUNTRY instead of what is cheap! It used to be that when you saw something made in America instilled AMERICAN PRIDE. I remember the automobile ads for Chevrolet of the 1950’s…See the USA in a Chevrolet and when I grew up Chevrolet was my choice to drive until 1998. Since then I drive FORDS!
    We have become a “throw away” society because of the cheap products made in china, India and other countries! I had rather pay more for AMERICAN MADE products for things that last than keep paying cheap prices for JUNK! When Sam Walton started Walmart he wanted AMERICAN MADE products on the shelves. You see what Walmart has become when he became unable to run his company…BIG difference between then and now! Just something to think about!

  5. Greg R says:

    I don’t think we can look to Trump for a quick solution. Don’t get me wrong, I supported and voted for him. We didn’t get here overnight and the problem isn’t going to get solved overnight. There isn’t a quick fix to this problem. Also, the next time the socialist democrats get back in power, it will all come undone. Sorry to be such a pessimist but I’ve been around a long time and things have only gotten worse, even after we thought they were getting better. Prepare yourself for the long haul.

    • Buddy Saunders says:

      Greg, I have been around a long time, too– I am 78– but I am less pessimistic than you. You are correct in saying that we did not get into this China problem overnight and that there is no quick fix to the problem. However, President Trump has put in motion a well-crafted tariff initiative intended to re-balance our trade with China. Knowing Pres. Trump as we do, during his second term he will reshape our relationship with China so profoundly that in the next presidential election voters will elect a new president in the Trump mold.

      Between now and then, there is very much that we as individuals can do. In that regard, I and my business have for years been ahead of the curve as have many people. To the extent possible, and it can sometimes be difficult, we buy American-made even if the cost is more. When in a store we look to see where a product is made. If it was made in China, we do not buy.

      I was in an Ace Hardware looking to buy tools for a new department in one of our warehouses. Virtually all the tools were made in China. Another example. Cracker Barrel restaurants have a large area devoted to snack and gift items. All the gift items were produced in China. These companies stock very little produced by Americans. Many other companies outsource to other countries, thus also depriving American workers of job opportunities.

      I would like to see Congress pass a labeling law that any product’s country of origin be clearly listed on the product and/or packaging, and if offered on the Internet, country of origin information be posted there as well.

  6. richard kaufman says:

    I would add to the reply of Jean Brammel, that we also need the US MAINSTREAM MEDIA to unbiasedly report the reality of the situation to the citizens. And yes (“Do you believe in miracles?” Thank you, Al Michaels), to support President Trump in his quest to fix the mess we’re in regarding China. Enough of living the story of The Emperor’s New Clothes, the members of the media are citizens, too. One would hope they would start to live and report the truth, rather than try to create it.

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