President Donald Trump’s policies have sparked widespread controversy since his return to the White House, with some describing him as an erratic and obsessive leader, whose policies fluctuate between threats and incoherent promises.
Under the title “The Great Disintegration Now Underway,” journalist Thomas Friedman of The New York Times described Trump’s erratic policies as his method of revenge. According to Friedman, Trump has no understanding of the major trends unfolding in the world. If you feel confused by the president’s contradictions on issues like Ukraine, tariffs, semiconductors, and other matters, it is not your problem.
Friedman explained that what we are witnessing is a president who entered the election to secure his re-election to avoid criminal trials and take revenge on those he falsely accused of stealing the 2020 election. After his victory, he returned to the issues that had obsessed him, from tariff grievances to Vladimir Putin, Volodymyr Zelensky, and Canada. He filled his administration with an incredible number of marginal ideologues, whose only qualification was their loyalty to Trump’s whims, above the Constitution, traditional American foreign policy values, and the economy’s foundation.
The result, according to Friedman, is what we see today: a chaotic cocktail of imposed tariffs followed by reversals, cutting aid to Ukraine, only to resume it later, withdrawing local support and government services, and then searching for exceptions.
Friedman pointed out that the world is facing a government led by a president obsessed with chaos, issuing conflicting decrees executed by government ministers and staff members, all united by the fear that Elon Musk or Trump himself will tweet about them if they stray from any political line set by their dear leader.
He added that the U.S. faces four more years of this madness, which will lead to a nervous breakdown in markets due to the uncertainty, with everyone—from company executives to local and foreign investors, as well as U.S. allies—likely to face a nervous breakdown.
Friedman emphasized that a country or trade cannot remain a permanent partner to the United States when President Trump threatened Ukraine and Russia only to retract the threat shortly afterward, then threatened Canada and Mexico with taxes, later postponing them. Officials in allied countries fear that America might turn into an enemy rather than a friend, with the only person treated kindly being Putin, which has shocked America’s long-time allies.
Friedman added that the biggest lie Trump spreads is that he inherited a destroyed economy from Joe Biden. He pointed out that while Trump made mistakes in his judgments, with the help of the Federal Reserve, Biden’s administration had successfully revived the economy. America does not need the shock of tariffs to thrive.
Friedman noted that corporate and household budgets were relatively in good shape, oil prices were at their lowest, the unemployment rate was around 4%, consumer spending was rising, and GDP growth was around 2%.
He continued that what America really needs is to address the trade imbalance with China. Trump was right on this from the start, and the U.S. could have addressed this situation by implementing targeted tariffs on China, in coordination with its allies who could do the same.
Economists now fear that the uncertainty injected by Trump into the economy could lead to an unwarranted reduction in interest rates, due to extreme investor uncertainty, which weakens growth both domestically and abroad. Or, the U.S. could face an even worse scenario: a mix of stagnant growth and inflation (caused by excessive tariffs), known as stagflation.
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