Russia Not on US Tariff List Despite Broad Global Reach | Sweden Herald (swedenherald.com)
from schizoidman@lemm.ee to world@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 08:25
https://lemm.ee/post/60254889

#world

threaded - newest

Nurse_Robot@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 08:46 next collapse

Is … Is the US trading with Russia?

Edit: pretty much no. Dumb rage bait article

Double edit: fuck you, lemmy

UncleArthur@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 08:59 next collapse

True, but given that Trump has put tariffs on uninhabited islands in the Arctic (I believe), it’s still an interesting point to make.

Edit: spelling.

Litebit@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 09:23 next collapse

Yes they are. It is common knowledge. That is why people are still pushing for more sanctions and trade restrictions.

**United States Imports from Russia was US$3.27 Billion during 2024, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade.  **

tradingeconomics.com/united-states/…/russia

[deleted] on 03 Apr 09:34 next collapse
.
InvertedParallax@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 09:36 next collapse

ustr.gov/countries-regions/…/russia

U.S. total goods trade with Russia were an estimated $3.5 billion in 2024. U.S. goods exports to Russia in 2024 were $526.1 million, down 12.3 percent ($73.5 million) from 2023. U.S. goods imports from Russia totaled $3.0 billion in 2024, down 34.2 percent ($1.6 billion) from 2023. The U.S. goods trade deficit with Russia was $2.5 billion in 2024, a 37.5 percent decrease ($1.5 billion) over 2023.

BrokenGlepnir@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 09:55 collapse

So the source is your reddit comment linking to a statement from a “Whitehouse official”. I do not trust anyone representing Donald trump.

Edit:I don’t know why it looked like reddit to me

[deleted] on 03 Apr 10:17 next collapse
.
[deleted] on 03 Apr 10:19 collapse
.
galanthus@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:12 collapse

3 billion is nothing.

I wonder how much the EU imports.

CileTheSane@lemmy.ca on 03 Apr 17:12 next collapse

3 billion is nothing.

Cool, can I borrow $3 billion?

Trump put tariffs on uninhibited islands, which is literally $0 in trade.

galanthus@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 20:00 collapse

If you are a country with a GDP that is 1000 or 10000 times higher it will not be a problem.

CileTheSane@lemmy.ca on 03 Apr 21:15 collapse

Again, Trump put tariffs on uninhabited Islands.

Aux@feddit.uk on 03 Apr 19:50 collapse

Russia never traded much with US. So it’s business as usual.

InvertedParallax@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 09:36 collapse

ustr.gov/countries-regions/…/russia

U.S. total goods trade with Russia were an estimated $3.5 billion in 2024. U.S. goods exports to Russia in 2024 were $526.1 million, down 12.3 percent ($73.5 million) from 2023. U.S. goods imports from Russia totaled $3.0 billion in 2024, down 34.2 percent ($1.6 billion) from 2023. The U.S. goods trade deficit with Russia was $2.5 billion in 2024, a 37.5 percent decrease ($1.5 billion) over 2023.

el_twitto@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 08:55 next collapse

Trump is definitely a Russian asset.

GrumpyDuckling@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 08:58 next collapse

His Parents were Soviet assets and he was adopted from Russia, so it checks out.

tacosanonymous@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 09:29 next collapse

Uh, what?

JasonDJ@lemmy.zip on 03 Apr 11:11 collapse

I don’t think it landed well but I think he’s Rubber/Glue-ing the Obama birth certificate thing back to him.

monarch@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 09:43 collapse

Im going to need some serious evidence that the sitting US president is not a natural born citizen and therefore is not actually the president.

GrumpyDuckling@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 10:01 next collapse

Let’s see the birth certificate.

Carvex@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 11:31 next collapse

…every accusation is an admission…

JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:24 collapse

Only the long form one will do

GrumpyDuckling@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 13:41 collapse

The longest.

idiomaddict@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 13:44 next collapse

I’m honestly not sure how that would apply to infant adoptions. It’s my understanding that if the adoption occurs early enough, the adoptive parents will be listed on the birth certificate. It certainly feels like a child adopted in infancy by citizens should be just as eligible for the presidency as a child naturally born to citizens, but I’d also have a hard time drawing a line age-wise after which that would no longer apply and I do see a reason to bar children adopted at 17 from the presidency. My niece was adopted at three years old and she does remember her biological mother, but she’s absolutely my sister and brother in law’s daughter, in terms of her personality, culture, and values. That’s only a data point of one and I’d like more, but I don’t know how easy that would be to track for other adopted children.

yeather@lemmy.ca on 03 Apr 15:36 collapse

If she has a US birth certificate she would be a citizen I believe. If not any attempt to run for office would be questioned.

fibojoly@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 17:37 collapse

Well, he could just show his birth certificate, right?

GrumpyDuckling@sh.itjust.works on 04 Apr 00:03 collapse

They forged it.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 14:58 next collapse

Embracing the Ultra-Nationalist Paleocon wing of the Republican Party and stuffing your administration with goldbugs and Silicon Valley anarcho-capitalists?

Why does an American President consuming American Propaganda and regurgitating a uniquely American public policy at the behest of his wealthiest American peers and hooting white-nationalist proles waving American flags get flagged as Russian?

index@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 19:27 next collapse

US is the richest country in the world and the one with the largest and most advanced army. To me it sound quite unlikely to believe that the president of USA is controlled by russia (a country that is 10 times less rich).

moriquende@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 20:30 collapse

I’m not sure what the things you say have to do with anything? Trump is an individual who got voted into the presidency largely thanks to social media manipulation, which is known to often originate from Russian bot and troll farms. There’s no reason to believe the USA being rich (which only means a few individuals and corporations are very rich, btw) or having the largest army could have prevented it.

index@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 21:17 collapse

social media manipulation

Biggest social media are all owned by private american corporations in bed with the government. Same as before to me it doesn’t sound much likely that the russian government can successfully manipulate them.

There’s no reason to believe the USA being rich (which only means a few individuals and corporations are very rich, btw) or having the largest army could have prevented it.

Having the largest army doesn’t mean they have more guys running around in a field. USA has the most technological advanced army in the world, they have the biggest mass surveillance network, more military facilities around the world, more satellites in orbit and they top everyone else in cyberwarfare.

feanpoli@lemmy.ml on 04 Apr 02:55 collapse

And Putin isn’t a U.S. asset? While both countries are geopolitical adversaries, their military and strategic moves have ironically helped sustain each other’s defense industries; just not in a cooperative way.

[deleted] on 03 Apr 09:29 next collapse
.
InvertedParallax@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 09:36 next collapse

ustr.gov/countries-regions/…/russia

U.S. total goods trade with Russia were an estimated $3.5 billion in 2024. U.S. goods exports to Russia in 2024 were $526.1 million, down 12.3 percent ($73.5 million) from 2023. U.S. goods imports from Russia totaled $3.0 billion in 2024, down 34.2 percent ($1.6 billion) from 2023. The U.S. goods trade deficit with Russia was $2.5 billion in 2024, a 37.5 percent decrease ($1.5 billion) over 2023.

steeznson@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 14:47 collapse

Yeah if I were being charitable I might imagine they aren’t on the list because they are already subject to extremely high tarrifs and embargoes. Maybe increased those tarrifs could be a bargaining chip in ending the Ukraine invasion. Impossible to tell with Trump though.

Litebit@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 09:29 next collapse

Good point, considering the US still trades with Russia.

**United States Imports from Russia was US$3.27 Billion during 2024, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade. **

tradingeconomics.com/united-states/…/russia

danc4498@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 11:40 collapse

tradingeconomics.com/russia/…/united-states

Russia imports $17 billions from USA. So we don’t have a trade deficit with Russia.

He’s definitely a Russian troll, but I’m not sure this is the data point to prove it.

Saeveo@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 15:37 collapse

The US consistently runs a trade deficit with Russia.

www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c4621.html

The US has a trade surplus with the UK, but still applied a 10% tariff to them.

danc4498@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 17:44 collapse

So is that trading economics website just BS, then?

blujan@sopuli.xyz on 04 Apr 01:13 collapse

You’re comparing 2021 exports with 2024 imports

superkret@feddit.org on 03 Apr 09:57 next collapse

Almost the entire world is paralyzed by American tariffs

😂

chaosCruiser@futurology.today on 03 Apr 10:11 collapse

Looks more like Russia and USA are in the same trade embargo, while the rest of the world is free to do whatever they want.

finitebanjo@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:22 collapse

If anybody is paralyzed it might be Sk and Japan but SK is already jumping ship and trading with China, now.

El_Azulito@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 09:59 next collapse

That tracks. Prove to me he’s not a Russian asset.

homesweethomeMrL@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:48 collapse

Sure thing, let’s just go to the unredacted Mueller Rep- AW GODDAMMIT

riodoro1@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 10:23 next collapse

That finnish president sure talked some sense into him.

wirebeads@lemmy.ca on 03 Apr 10:31 next collapse

Un-fucking-real.

This presidency will be such a shit stain on the world. The world will never trust the U.S. in the same way it did before.

Over a century of trust and partnerships destroyed in less than 100 days.

finitebanjo@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:20 next collapse

Well. The bridge took some damage in the previous Trump admin as well.

I think far too many people forgot those times.

homesweethomeMrL@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:47 collapse

Or never knew them to begin with

lowleekun@ani.social on 03 Apr 12:46 next collapse

As well as it should not trust the U.S. the same again. While i absolutely despise the orange turd he has shown what has been true before: The west has been too reliant on the U.S. ,which both sides enjoyed while it lastet, as the U.S. called the shots, the rest of the west followed and we all benefitted (often on the backs of the global south ofc). No more. Maybe some good will come out of it (strong hopium, i know)

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 03 Apr 19:47 collapse

not trust. coercion.

and i’m so glad it seems to be ending.

lepinkainen@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 10:45 next collapse

Could someone ask Propaganda Barbie about this?

eran_morad@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 11:41 next collapse

KKKaroline

JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:23 collapse

Uh… which one? There’s so many I’ve lost track. I only seem to remember dog killer, handyqueen and simian goblin.

Cocopanda@futurology.today on 03 Apr 11:18 next collapse

Because we have embargoed all Russian trade. I hope more folks realize this.

undone@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 13:43 collapse

US imported $3.2 billion in goods and exported $595 million. Trade deficit of 2.7 billion Syria, Iran, Venezuela (according to Forbes) were tariffed - despite being already sanctioned.

danc4498@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 11:36 next collapse

What’s the trade difference? Aren’t we not allowed to trade with them at all?

galanthus@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 11:46 collapse

Russia exports next to nothing to the US, but it does import things like electronics for obvious reasons.

Tarrifs on Russia will be pointless, really. Russia has been trading with Europe for the most part for obvious reasons until it fell out of favour. So this seems like manufactured outrage.

danc4498@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 11:48 next collapse

That’s what I was thinking. Plenty of reason for outrage. This will just be a distraction.

atzanteol@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 12:37 next collapse

There are tariffs on uninhabited islands. Russia being an exception is notable.

galanthus@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:42 collapse

Lmao, what? Why even?

Well, even then, these islands are not significant geopolitical actors. And tarrifs will certinly not hurt the Russian economy, and I doubt they are going to help the US in terms of geopolitics.

atzanteol@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 13:00 collapse

Lmao, what? Why even?

Because Trump is a moron surrounded by a team of idiots.

Well, even then, these islands are not significant geopolitical actors.

And yet they have tarrifs.

And tarrifs will certinly not hurt the Russian economy, and I doubt they are going to help the US in terms of geopolitics.

The same can be said if many of the other tariffs Trump has imposed. Which is why Russia’s exception is notable.

galanthus@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 13:07 collapse

You missed my point. Islands are irrelevant. Russia isn’t.

Grimy@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 13:28 collapse

Yes exactly. Yet the islands were included but Russia wasn’t. So the situation isn’t that Russia has no trade and tariffs are useless against it, but that Russia was specifically singled out so they wouldn’t receive tariffs.

Just take the loss, jfc.

homesweethomeMrL@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:49 next collapse

Tarrifs on Russia will be pointless

Nope!

galanthus@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:52 collapse

Your great argument has changed my mind. I now see that I was wrong. Thank you.

treesapx@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 13:34 next collapse

Trump followed a consistent, rigid math: Whatever the trade deficit, then that’s the tariff applied… except for Russia. Russia is #23 on our list of trade partners. Following the math they should have a hefty tariff applied, but they don’t. It’s the only exception.

Aux@feddit.uk on 03 Apr 19:49 collapse

Most electronics are imported from China, not from US. No one will be sending iPhones from China to US and then to the rest of the world.

eran_morad@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 11:40 next collapse

Well, uh, who do you think is calling the shots?

JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 12:21 next collapse

That’ll show em! Trump was ANGRY at Russia these few days!

OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 13:31 next collapse

I try to keep a sense of perspective, every president I disagree with seems to be the worst president ever at the time.

I really want to say Bush’s useless Trillion dollar wars are worse than this.

But it’s close and we have 3.5 more years of this.

1984@lemmy.today on 03 Apr 13:40 next collapse

Obama was pretty decent no? He managed to at least speak normally.

TheFriar@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 13:49 next collapse

That’s an absurdly low bar.

1984@lemmy.today on 04 Apr 06:11 collapse

Yes but look at the people who becomes US presidents. The bar needs to be low or none of them can reach it.

fishos@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 13:54 next collapse

As much as I despise Obama for vastly expanding our extrajudicial drone strike policy… All things put into perspective, yeah he was pretty decent.

match@pawb.social on 03 Apr 19:06 collapse

yeah. rip abdulrahman alawaki though

OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 14:11 next collapse

I was fine with like 80% of Obama and like 60% of Clinton’s actual policies while enjoying the economy that I don’t credit him for. But then W Bush was like a 10% and Trump 1 maybe 15% (Warp Speed, passing the vast majority of Covid stimulus, ironically all the stuff he’s against now) and I’m batting zero so far on Trump 2 but I assume at some point he’ll do something I agree with.

Joeffect@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 18:51 collapse

The only possibility of me agreeing with this old fuck is him stepping down as President… But then we would have to deal with a Vance Presidency and I’m not sure that would be better

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 14:55 collapse

Obama was pretty decent no?

How Obama Destroyed Black Wealth

Neil Barofsky, the bailout inspector general, later testified that protecting the banks was the actual goal. The administration’s aim was to “foam the runway” for the banks, as Barofsky witnessed Tim Geithner tell Elizabeth Warren. HAMP failed, in other words, because it was not designed to help homeowners.

As a result, in many cases HAMP actively enabled foreclosure. Its re-default rate — the fraction of people who got a modification and later defaulted out of the program — was 22 percent as of 2013. Only about $15 billion of the original $75 billion appropriation was spent by mid-2016.

Out of an initial promised 4 million mortgage modifications — itself a drastic underestimate — by the end of 2016 only 2.7 million had even been started. Out of that number, only 1.7 million made it to permanent modification, and of those, 558,000 eventually washed out of the program.

Former Wells Fargo employees later testified that the bank deliberately tricked middle-class black families (who they called “mud people”) into subprime “ghetto loans.” Overall, a Center for Responsible Lending study found that from 2004 to 2008, 6.2 percent of white borrowers with a credit score of 660 and up got subprime mortgages, while 19.3 percent of such Latino borrowers and 21.4 percent of black borrowers did.

The effects of the foreclosure disaster are starkly apparent in Survey of Consumer Finances data. To start, the homeownership national rate shows a marked decline over almost the whole Obama presidency, reaching the lowest rate since 1965 (before slightly rebounding).

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 14:52 next collapse

I really want to say Bush’s useless Trillion dollar wars are worse than this.

I would say Bush’s bailout of the O&G sector in '01 and the Financial Sector in '08 laid the seeds for worse social and ecological conditions over the subsequent two decades. Similarly, NAFTA and the subsequent midwestern de-industrialization was nightmarish for US industry and Mexican agriculture.

These blunders set us up to need international trade. What’s crazy about Trump’s tariffs is that he’s not addressing the underlying infrastructure problems or the crushing post-Great Recession debt traps. He’s just squeezing at the point of the supply chain in order to punish American industry and labor for adapting to the sabotaged economic landscape of the neoliberal era.

It is the economic equivalent of kicking a guy in the kidneys after he’s already been laid out on the ground.

Krompus@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 18:33 collapse

*3.8

spirinolas@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 13:44 next collapse

Uh? Of course he isn’t. Why would Putin tell him to put tariffs on himself? That makes no sense.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 14:47 collapse

The US has been sanctioning Russia for the better part of the last decade. We aren’t tariffing them because we aren’t trading with them.

We also aren’t tariffing Venezuela, Cuba, or North Korea, for the same reasons.

shalafi@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 14:59 next collapse

Surely American trades some products? Where does Russian vodka come from?

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 15:10 next collapse

statista.com/…/us-imports-by-commodity-from-russi…

It does look like we import about $3B/year. Mostly fertilizers, which make up 1/3 of total imports, and some raw metals and a bit of heavy machinery. But that’s minuscule beside our trade balances with the top of his tariff list - China, the EU, Vietnam, Taiwan, Japan, and India. We do $20B/year with tiny little South Korea, as a point of comparison. We bring in $6B/year from South Africa.

To my knowledge, we don’t import Russian vodka in any significant quantity. Anything “Russian” branded is typically imported from one of the neighboring states - Ukraine, Belarus, Poland, Romania. Red Army Vodka, for instance, is from a Polish company.

Saeveo@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 15:30 collapse

He slapped a 50% tarrif on Lesotho, so it’s clearly not about size or impact.

And the UK got a 10% tariff applied even though the US doesn’t have a goods trade deficit with them.

ThomasCrappersGhost@feddit.uk on 03 Apr 19:34 collapse

Some people are saying that this is cause Trump likes us.

Vikthor@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 07:06 collapse

Now that is a lie. He only likes himself and Ivanka.

ThomasCrappersGhost@feddit.uk on 04 Apr 14:46 collapse

I know. It’s insane.

AJ1@lemmy.ca on 03 Apr 15:14 next collapse

I was under the impression that we (in Canada) get our vodka mostly from Finland, but it’s been a while since I worked as an alcohol purveyor… I’m ashamed of the things I did during those years, but I’m in recovery now, thank you for your concern

nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Apr 18:43 collapse

idaho i think

thedirtyknapkin@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 15:58 next collapse

Maybe, but apparently we’re tariffing multiple uninhabited islands. It would seem that active trade is not a perquisite for tariffs these days. can’t be having people move out there and not getting tariffed in the future.

I hope he puts tariffs on Mars next. Maybe after he falls out with musk.

spirinolas@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 19:00 next collapse

They are eating the dogs and now they are tariffing the penguins.

samus12345@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 19:11 next collapse
MonkeMischief@lemmy.today on 04 Apr 16:18 collapse

Man the Sentinelese are gonna be pissed when they learn about this.

nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Apr 18:35 next collapse

it’s funny that this is being downvoted. lemmy is basically reddit. rooting for the good guys, but also dogshit stupid

Brumefey@sh.itjust.works on 03 Apr 19:32 next collapse

Downvoted because it’s wrong : We aren’t tariffing them because we aren’t trading with them.

So are some inhabited islands which are hit by tariffs. Maybe the dogshit stupid is the one not seeing the ties between trump and putin.

moriquende@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 20:43 next collapse

Damn you sound very smart, please tell me more

kava@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 02:13 collapse

Systems that have voting mechanisms result in hive minds. It’s an inevitable result.

1st someone is much more likely to vote something up or down depending on how positive / negative it is. So it snowballs sort of like compounding interest

2nd the simplest most common denominator takes bubble to the top. Precisely because more people can understand and therefore vote.

It’s why you’ll always see some screenshot of Twitter much higher than a long in depth article. Even though the article has infinitely more value.

Spacehooks@reddthat.com on 03 Apr 19:45 next collapse

But tarrif on seals in the Antarctica region? Doesn’t seem like logic is driving any of this.

Jhex@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 23:13 collapse

But McDonald island is ripping the USA off!!!

peoplebeproblems@midwest.social on 03 Apr 13:57 next collapse

I wonder why

[deleted] on 03 Apr 14:28 next collapse
.
Stern@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 16:44 next collapse

You can view this one of two ways, possibly both:

  1. Krasnov
  2. Trump apparently was doing these tariffs based on trade deficits (Which is stupid on its own, if your dentist doesn’t buy the widgets you sell, that’s not a tariff.), if Russia wasn’t running one, then there you go.

To rebuke 2 I present the following- ustr.gov/countries-regions/…/russia

U.S. total goods trade with Russia were an estimated $3.5 billion in 2024. U.S. goods exports to Russia in 2024 were $526.1 million, down 12.3 percent ($73.5 million) from 2023. U.S. goods imports from Russia totaled $3.0 billion in 2024, down 34.2 percent ($1.6 billion) from 2023. The U.S. goods trade deficit with Russia was $2.5 billion in 2024, a 37.5 percent decrease ($1.5 billion) over 2023.

Based on that math, with the CNN article I linked for the formula (the country’s trade deficit divided by its exports to the United States times 1/2) we get - (2,500,000,000 / 3,000,000,000) * 1/2 = 0.416666…

So Russia should have a 42% tariff based on their purported 83% tariff on us.

Aux@feddit.uk on 03 Apr 19:42 next collapse

And that’s how you end up in Guantanamo.

limelight79@lemm.ee on 04 Apr 13:52 collapse

Trump seems to think the trade deficit is some sort of debt that we’ll have to pay off in the future.

The overall goal of bringing manufacturing back to the US isn’t necessarily a bad one, but this is probably the worst way to go about doing it. One article I read pointed out that it would take many years of consistent tariffs to generate that kind of interest and investment - but anyone with half a brain knows these tariffs could be gone tomorrow, so there’s little inclination to actually try to build factories in the US based on this move. No reasonable investor would want to bet their company on Trump acting consistently.

MonkeMischief@lemmy.today on 04 Apr 16:16 collapse

…pointed out that it would take many years of consistent tariffs to generate that kind of interest and investment…

That’s the scary thing. Citrus-Hitler assumes he’s gonna have himself and his policies in place for “many years of consistent tariffs.”

huppakee@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 17:02 next collapse

I wonder why…

<img alt="Putin puppet" src="https://i.imgflip.com/1i19co.jpg">

TwinTitans@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 18:13 collapse

That picture is one of the funniest I’ve ever seen. Absolutely a classic.

huppakee@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 18:36 collapse

Here’s a treat, don’t consume them all at once: dailymail.co.uk/…/Trump-ruthlessly-mocked-social-…

Godric@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 17:02 next collapse

For context, Cuba, North Korea, and Belarus are also not tariffed because they are sanctioned instead.

sik0fewl@lemmy.ca on 03 Apr 23:01 collapse

I wondered the same thing. Why would you add tariffs if it’s illegal to even trade with them?

Godric@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 00:12 collapse

One wouldn’t, which makes all the Krasnov comments in this situation entertaining.

feanpoli@lemmy.ml on 03 Apr 18:06 next collapse

Russia remains a key supplier of resources critical to U.S. industry (titanium, palladium, uranium). While technically replaceable, developing alternative sources would take years. This makes the current moment less than ideal for imposing higher tariffs on Russia, particularly when the priority is to reindustrialize the U.S.

TwinTitans@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 18:14 next collapse

It’s almost like they couldn’t get this from Canada anymore…for some reason…

mycelium_underground@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 18:33 next collapse

The real key resource that Russia holds has to be a video of Trump on Epsteins Island.

Jarix@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 19:45 collapse

We are so passed that. I dont think it would matter to MAGA america.

nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 03 Apr 18:33 next collapse

the same is true for other countries on this list. nearly all of them for example

feanpoli@lemmy.ml on 03 Apr 21:19 collapse

I wasn’t claiming this was the only reason, just that it’s one possible factor. Here are some sources that highlight Russia’s role in supplying critical materials like palladium, titanium (via Kazakhstan), and nuclear fuel. While alternative sources exist, replacing Russian supplies isn’t immediate or simple.

Import Sources (2019–22): Palladium: Russia, 32%; South Africa, 31%; Italy, 8%; Canada, 7%; and other, 22%. Source: pubs.usgs.gov/…/mcs2024-platinum-group.pdf

Palladium is critical to the U.S. economy and national security. Russia is the largest supplier of the metal to the United States. Source: usitc.gov/…/ebot_russia_palladium_and_semiconduct…

Apparently there was no titanium sponge import directly from Russia since 2022 sanctions. However 9% of imports come from Kazakhstan (VSMPO-AVISMA subsidiaries) Source: pubs.usgs.gov/periodicals/…/mcs2024-titanium.pdf

US scrambles to break reliance on Russian nuclear fuel Russia had a monopoly on HALEU until recently. Despite U.S. effort to remedy tis issue for them their nuclear industry still faces challenges in meeting its HALEU needs domestically. Source: ft.com/…/7ead1252-70a5-4258-8d0c-b01a65bd61f1

match@pawb.social on 03 Apr 19:02 next collapse

now explain why Russia is uniquely in this position or i user note you as a russian agent

feanpoli@lemmy.ml on 03 Apr 21:32 collapse

Well, as much as I’d love a dramatic spy backstory, I’m afraid I’m neither an FSB nor an FBI agent. Just a regular person thinking out loud. I don’t have a definitive answer, just some suppositions. I share them so we can all explore the topic with arguments and counterarguments; no secret dossiers required! Open to hearing different perspectives.

learningduck@programming.dev on 04 Apr 01:20 collapse

I find it funny than instead of at least imposing 10% tariff by default on Russia and selectively exempt critical resources. Russian wasn’t listed at all.

Even an unoccupied island got 10% tariff by default.

HubertManne@piefed.social on 03 Apr 19:45 next collapse

I was noticing this as well. The place that should have the highest tarrifs.

joenforcer@midwest.social on 04 Apr 13:18 collapse

“tariffs”

TheDeadlySquid@lemm.ee on 03 Apr 21:27 next collapse

Should tell you everything you need to know.

sommerset@thelemmy.club on 04 Apr 01:10 collapse

Do people not realize there is no US Russia trade so tariffs would be moot.

pleasegoaway@lemm.ee on 04 Apr 01:17 next collapse

No US Russia trade YET.

jve@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 01:48 collapse

no US Russia trade

U.S. total goods trade with Russia were an estimated $3.5 billion in 2024. U.S. goods exports to Russia in 2024 were $526.1 million, down 12.3 percent ($73.5 million) from 2023. U.S. goods imports from Russia totaled $3.0 billion in 2024, down 34.2 percent ($1.6 billion) from 2023. The U.S. goods trade deficit with Russia was $2.5 billion in 2024, a 37.5 percent decrease ($1.5 billion) over 2023.

ustr.gov/countries-regions/…/russia

But what’s a few billion between friends?

nickiwest@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 23:27 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/0cb2738c-0b3a-4394-9e68-7dbbb97215bb.png">

tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip on 03 Apr 23:58 collapse

I miss Gilbert

slackassassin@sh.itjust.works on 04 Apr 01:03 collapse

I’m sad now.

butwhyishischinabook@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 00:21 next collapse

Guys I think there’s some evidence that this is, shall we say, Russia friendly (such as the astronomical tariff rate on Moldova of all places), but Russia isn’t included because it’s a “Column 2” country alongside Belarus, Cuba, and North Korea, and therefore all subject to the stiff tariffs we already impose on the worst of the worst. Please let’s not share things like this which just make us look gullable to the morons on the right supporting this buffoon. It’s not a good look.

Carol2852@discuss.tchncs.de on 04 Apr 04:17 collapse

Do you have a source for this? I checked www.bbc.com/news/articles/c5ypxnnyg7jo but cannot find this.

Edit: discuss.tchncs.de/comment/17517599 says that some countries are not included in tariffs because they are sanctioned instead.

butwhyishischinabook@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 12:46 collapse

Look at section 3(b) of the executive order linked here, at the portion discussing “column 2”:

whitehouse.gov/…/regulating-imports-with-a-recipr…

Wolverdiddlyino@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 00:32 next collapse

Krasnov strikes again! Until there is evidence to counter this theory, it satisfies Occam’s Razor.

Gates9@sh.itjust.works on 04 Apr 00:53 next collapse

Kompromat

learningduck@programming.dev on 04 Apr 01:18 next collapse

So US imposed tariff on penguins, but 0 on Russia!

oliver@lemmy.midgardmates.com on 04 Apr 04:09 next collapse

Well, why should Agent Krasnov put tariffs on the hand that feeds him, good old Vlad? 🤷🏼‍♂️

quack@lemmy.zip on 04 Apr 12:59 next collapse

Fairly sure that’s because Russia is heavily sanctioned by thr US already, alongside North Korea, Cuba, Iran etc.

Things are bad but let’s not spread hysteria.

bluewing@lemm.ee on 04 Apr 13:09 next collapse

Yeah, it’s hard to put a tariff on a country that you have already sanctioned and don’t trade with at all. But that fact doesn’t play well here.

smayonak@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 13:24 collapse

The US has 3.5 billion in trade with Russia. The tariffs include Iran; Venezuela, etc… they also slapped them on countries which we have a trade surplus with.

It’s also looking like they used chatgpt to write the list but then specifically omitted five countries. Russia, north korea, Cuba, Belarus. Russia and its fine closest allies. How can anyone see this and not think the Kremlin does t own the Epstein tapes

unemployedclaquer@sopuli.xyz on 04 Apr 13:35 next collapse

they released the JFK tapes! several times!

honestly i remain skeptical any “kompromat” on trump exists. or any Epstein documents remain that matter. we’ve all seen it

smayonak@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 13:41 collapse

I was skeptical up until the tariffs. Now it’s obvious they’ve got blackmail.

Alao an interview with epstein was leaked last year where he mentioned trump having sex on his plane. But in 2017 that clip was suppressed for some reason.

We know trump flew on that plane many times and that it was rigged with secret cameras

limelight79@lemm.ee on 04 Apr 13:47 next collapse

I doubt it’s a blackmail thing, because at this point, not one of Trump’s supporters would give a damn if it was clearly proven that Trump personally took CP pictures.

I think Putin just whispers sweet nothings into Trump’s ear and controls him that way.

smayonak@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 14:33 collapse

A large part of their movement is based on aesthetics. And csam is probably a bridge too far for them. It just looks ugly. But I have no doubt many of them don’t care about that either.

But from the blackmail angle, the public image of a sick pedo is not compatible with the orange man’s public facing persona and his narcissism would make him the perfect blackmail target

unemployedclaquer@sopuli.xyz on 04 Apr 13:47 collapse

i wouldn’t say trump wasn’t a super gross Epstein buddy, we already know that.

“rigged with secret cameras”, so what. where is it now.

edit I know nothing is forthcoming. there’s nothing. stop fabricating and focus on what’s happening, because it’s already terrifying

smayonak@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 14:11 collapse

There’s nothing that explains what orange man is doing better than blackmail.

greedytacothief@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Apr 13:38 collapse

In terms of nations, I really have no idea what 3.5 billion means. Like is that a lot? I feel like we probably trade that much with China in like what, a week? A month, a day?

10001110101@lemm.ee on 04 Apr 14:43 collapse

He tariffed countries with no people and trade deficits of thousands of dollars, and tariffed Ukraine.

unemployedclaquer@sopuli.xyz on 04 Apr 13:16 next collapse

don’t read the news because it might get weird for you

dingleberrylover@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 13:30 next collapse

That was also the official argument from Karoline Leavitt, spokesperson of the White House, although last years trading volume between Russia and the US still was about 3.5 billion USD (roughly three times of what Ukraine - US traded).

The question whether tariffs for Russia makes sense or not is rendered meaningless given the fact that the whole tariff plan is just wild (super small countries with a mimiscule part of trading volume still got heavily sanctioned etc).

You are right that we should not spread hysteria, but we should still question statements coming from government officials.

GoodOleAmerika@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 14:09 next collapse

That is less than sending 19 billion to Israel for free

quack@lemmy.zip on 04 Apr 14:23 collapse

Agree with what you’re saying here and I think I need to do some more reading. Getting the impression that I’ve been misinformed/mislead.

Bytemeister@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 14:17 collapse

How does this point keep coming up? It’s been refuted like a dozen times in every post I see. Feels like intentional disinfo at this point.

quack@lemmy.zip on 04 Apr 14:21 collapse

You can believe what you like but I’m not here to spread disinformation. Looking at the replies from other people I think I’m just misinformed and need to do more research. It’s possible to be wrong on the internet without it being tied up in a conspiracy.

Bytemeister@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 14:29 collapse

Right, but the number of people spreading the same wrong thing in multiple threads hours after they were openly provided direct info as to their error, starts to make it seem like a coordinated disinfo campaign.

Yes, it is possible to be wrong on the internet without a malicious intent. It’s also possible to spread disinfo without being a malicious actor, since the whole point of disinfo is to get other people to take it up and spread it, occluding the real issue and disrupting genuine conversation about it.

For clarity, I am not accusing you of being a malicious or disingenuous actor here. No offense, but I doubt you arrived at your position in a vacuum, you probably heard it from somewhere else first I imagine?

Bacano@lemmy.world on 04 Apr 16:26 collapse

It’s a logical conclusion from quack, imo. It’s the second thing that came to my mind after the obvious ‘oh duh cause he’s Russias agent’

NutWrench@lemmy.ml on 04 Apr 16:23 next collapse

It’s more obvious than a sunrise that Trump doesn’t work for America.

sommerset@thelemmy.club on 04 Apr 17:14 collapse

from here t.me/s/artjockey_lite

Dmitriev gave a statement following his meetings in the US. Let me remind you that this was actually the first visit of this level since the beginning of the war, and sanctions were temporarily lifted for it.

As a result:

The timing of a new round of negotiations between the US and Russia will be determined in the near future;

The resumption of direct air travel is under discussion;

US businesses are ready to take the place of companies that left from the EU [they know how to appeal to Trump];

Overall, the US is taking a constructive stance and behaving respectfully.

Judging by the statements, the talks were successful, but in practice — the truth is in the outcome. We’ll see whether there are any developments soon regarding the implementation of Russia’s conditions for a “maritime truce” or, on the contrary, whether Russia will make concessions and agree to it without sanctions being lifted.

Also, a reminder that in a few days, a Ukrainian delegation is set to hold negotiations in the US regarding a resource deal that Trump has already openly referred to as part of a peace agreement.

All in all, it looks like another round of diplomacy may take place next week. A maritime truce and a signed deal by Ukraine could be on the horizon. If that happens — or even if specific dates are set — the chances of a full ceasefire by the end of the month will significantly increase.