US US Politics General 2 - Discussion of President Trump and other politicians

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
General Trump Banner.png

Should be a wild four years.

Helpful links for those who need them:

Current members of the House of Representatives
https://www.house.gov/representatives

Current members of the Senate
https://www.senate.gov/senators/

Current members of the US Supreme Court
https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx

Members of the Trump Administration
https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/
 
Last edited by a moderator:
https://www.reuters.com/world/china/asian-crisis-reverse-currencies-soar-dollar-2025-05-06/ (A)

'Asian crisis in reverse' as currencies soar on the dollar​

  • Summary
  • Taiwan dollar rockets to record gains
  • Sing dollar near decade high, ringgit, yuan, baht and won rise
  • 'Asian demand for dollars is waning' - analyst
SINGAPORE/SHANGHAI, May 6 (Reuters) - A wave of dollar selling in Asia is an ominous sign for the greenback as the world's export powerhouse starts to question a decades-long trend of investing its big trade surpluses in U.S. assets.
Ripples from Friday and Monday's record rally in the Taiwan dollar are now spreading outward, driving surges for currencies in Singapore, South Korea, Malaysia, China and Hong Kong.
The Reuters Tariff Watch newsletter is your daily guide to the latest global trade and tariff news. Sign up here.

The moves sound a warning for the dollar because they suggest money is moving into Asia at scale and that a key pillar of dollar support is wobbling.

While Tuesday brought a measure of stability, following a stunning 10% two-day leap for Taiwan's currency, Hong Kong's dollar was testing the strong end of its peg and the Singapore dollar has soared close to its highest in more than a decade.
"To me, it has a very sort of Asian-crisis-in-reverse feel to it," said Louis-Vincent Gave, founding partner of Gavekal Research, in a podcast, due to the speed of the currency moves.

In 1997 and 1998, capital flight sank currencies from Thailand to Indonesia and South Korea and left the region determined to accumulate dollars in the aftermath.
"Since the Asian crisis, Asian savings have not only been massive, but they've had this tendency to be redeployed into U.S. Treasuries. And now, all of a sudden, that trade no longer looks like the one-way slam dunk that it had been for so long," said Gavekal's Gave.

Traders in Taiwan had reported difficulty executing trades, such was the one-sided wave of dollar selling, and speculated it had been at least tacitly endorsed by the central bank.
Dealers said volumes were heavy in other Asian markets.
At its heart, the break has been triggered by U.S. President Donald Trump's aggressive tariffs, analysts said, rattling investors' confidence in the dollar and upending the flow of trade dollars into U.S. assets in two places.
First, exporters especially in China can expect fewer receipts as tariffs cut access to U.S. customers. Second, fear of a U.S. downturn casts a shadow over U.S. asset returns.
"Trump's policies have weakened the market's confidence in the performance of U.S. dollar assets," said Gary Ng, senior economist at Natixis.
Some are speculating on what markets have termed a "Mar-a-Lago agreement," he said, or a deal - named after Trump's gilded Florida resort - to weaken the dollar.

Taiwan's Office of Trade Negotiations denied tariff talks in Washington last week had involved the topic of foreign exchange.

TALK BECOMES REALITY​

Asia's biggest piles of dollars sit in China, Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore, which combined number in the trillions.
In China alone, foreign currency deposits at banks - mostly dollars and largely held by exporters - were $959.8 billion at the end March, the highest in nearly three years.
On top of that are layered investments funded in these currencies, which have low borrowing costs by global standards and investments in U.S. stocks and bonds by pension and insurance funds, which have tended to keep foreign exchange hedges small due to the costs involved.
There are signs the dollar view is shifting from all corners. Goldman Sachs said in a note on Tuesday that investor clients had recently flipped from short yuan positions, to long positions, or in other words, they are shorting the U.S. dollar expecting further weakness.

Robin Xing, Morgan Stanley's chief China economist, said Trump's April 2 "Liberation Day" tariff announcement was the wake-up call that forced investors to at least hedge, if they weren't selling, U.S. assets.
"Over the mid- and long-term, I think people start thinking: how to diversify assets in the future, rather than be stuck in the outdated mentality of dollar supremacy."
A popular trade that involved buying cheap U.S. dollars in the Hong Kong dollar forwards market , known in markets as the gift that never stopped giving, also went into reverse since it rested on the Hong Kong dollar staying still.

"Macro funds and leveraged players have hundreds of billions of dollars in the HKD forwards free-money trade, and now they are unwinding," said Mukesh Dave, chief investment officer at Aravali Asset Management, a global arbitrage fund based in Singapore.
Hong Kong's de-facto central bank said on Monday it has been reducing duration in its U.S. Treasury holdings and diversifying currency exposure into non-U.S. assets.
Rallies in Asia's bond markets suggests exporters' and long-only money may be coming home, too.
"Repatriation talk is becoming reality," said Parisha Saimbi, Asia-Pacific rates and FX strategist at BNP Paribas in Singapore, as investors and exporters are either unwinding or rushing to hedge.
"Whichever format it comes in, it suggests that the support for the dollar is shifting and it's turning lower ... I think it speaks to this idea that there is a de-dollarization in action."
UBS estimates that if Taiwan's insurance companies increased hedging ratios to their 2017-2021 averages, it could be worth some $70 billion in U.S. dollar selling.
To be sure, Taiwan's central bank has vowed to stabilise the local currency and even the island's president took the unusual step of recording a video message to insist the exchange rate was not part of U.S. trade talks.
Still, the market seems to be voting with its wallet.
"USD/TWD is a canary in the coal mine," said Brent Donnelly, veteran trader and president at analytics firm Spectra Markets.
"Asian demand for U.S. dollars and Asian central bank desire to support the U.S. dollar is waning."
 
I’ve said it before, and even radical anti-Trump guys agree with me on this point.
It’s a shame that RFK Jr. is the only dude trying to tackle the absolute destruction that our tainted and poisoned food supply has wrought on our nation. It shouldn’t just be bipartisan concern, it should be common fucking sense.
He may be a sperg, but he’s all we got right now.
I know I’ve genuinely been positive towards America in most of my posts but I’ll break with that sentiment when it comes to food. I know foreigners from literal who countries talking mad shit is getting old but come on, there’s no way any sane person can defend this. I get concerned when Trump guys demand that other countries deregulate their food industry so that American goods can compete. I’ve been to America before and a lot of the packaged foods there just taste kind of different. The sweets are really sweet and plastic/waxy looking, the soda tastes chemical like and the ready made meals are surprisingly bland considering how much salt/sodium is in the product.

Edit: also, what’s with that whole business of having 20+ different kinds of packaged snacks that all kind of taste the same? Do you like the lime flavoured takis? Well these ones are like that but they’re slightly spicy. And these ones are like the last one but they’re blue, and this other kind is like that but even more spicy!
My adhd addled brain struggled. I would spend 10 minutes standing in the isle like a moron just trying to chose one. And in the end they were more similar than different
 
I know I’ve genuinely been positive towards America in most of my posts but I’ll break with that sentiment when it comes to food. I know foreigners from literal who countries talking mad shit is getting old but come on, there’s no way any sane person can defend this. I get concerned when Trump guys demand that other countries deregulate their food industry so that American goods can compete. I’ve been to America before and a lot of the packaged foods there just taste kind of different. The sweets are really sweet and plastic/waxy looking, the soda tastes chemical like and the ready made meals are surprisingly bland considering how much salt/sodium is in the product.
Literally every other country I’ve been to, even the poorer ones, had food that utterly mogged American slop. Fresh, real, cheap, delicious, made with ingredients you can actually pronounce and recognize as food.
American food? Just plastic slop, at a markup, and look at the people around here to see the effects it has on the body.
 
I know I’ve genuinely been positive towards America in most of my posts but I’ll break with that sentiment when it comes to food. I know foreigners from literal who countries talking mad shit is getting old but come on, there’s no way any sane person can defend this. I get concerned when Trump guys demand that other countries deregulate their food industry so that American goods can compete. I’ve been to America before and a lot of the packaged foods there just taste kind of different. The sweets are really sweet and plastic/waxy looking, the soda tastes chemical like and the ready made meals are surprisingly bland considering how much salt/sodium is in the product.

Edit: also, what’s with that whole business of having 20+ different kinds of packaged snacks that all kind of taste the same? Do you like the lime flavoured takis? Well these ones are like that but they’re slightly spicy. And these ones are like the last one but they’re blue, and this other kind is like that but even more spicy!
My adhd addled brain struggled. I would spend 10 minutes standing in the isle like a moron just trying to chose one. And in the end they were more similar than different
Wong stalker child! The rest of the world will eat the Big Mac and they will like it!
 
I know I’ve genuinely been positive towards America in most of my posts but I’ll break with that sentiment when it comes to food. I know foreigners from literal who countries talking mad shit is getting old but come on, there’s no way any sane person can defend this. I get concerned when Trump guys demand that other countries deregulate their food industry so that American goods can compete. I’ve been to America before and a lot of the packaged foods there just taste kind of different. The sweets are really sweet and plastic/waxy looking, the soda tastes chemical like and the ready made meals are surprisingly bland considering how much salt/sodium is in the product.
Literally every other country I’ve been to, even the poorer ones, had food that utterly mogged American slop. Fresh, real, cheap, delicious, made with ingredients you can actually pronounce and recognize as food.
American food? Just plastic slop, at a markup, and look at the people around here to see the effects it has on the body.
When the only other countries with more dubious food on average are all third world shack and village type arrangements. And china, the land of counterfeit eggs and plastic rice, you know your food regulation and quality has gotten fucking bad and too normalized as being bad.
And this is objectively true unless you exclusively shop at co-ops or hippie dippie places (and even THEN...) or eat a very limited and narrow range of a diet.

Your average working joe american shouldn't have to spend a premium to buy food that is actually fit for human consumption while being a lable reading adherant who has to know three dozen weasel word marketing terms and navigate a FDA sanctioned obfuscation gambit to avoid eating schrodinger's poisons and industrial runoff.
 
When the only other countries with more dubious food on average are all third world shack and village type arrangements
I’ve been to actual coconut villages in bumfuck ‘Nam jungle, and the food there was impeccable because they grew the chickens, rice, fruit, and veggies themselves.
Travels aside though, we all know America has the worst fucking food.
 
Last edited:
Back