If a surplus is good, then why is Japan, which once produced the world's largest surplus, poor?
The problem is that the Deep State has been exploiting this trade deficit to make money, and at least the United States has benefited hugely in the process.
What is the difference between Japanese people, who live in a rabbit hutch no matter how hard they work, and Arab people, who can live in a mansion without working because they have oil?
At least 10 years ago, if you were middle class in the United States, you could live in a big house, drive a car, and live a happy life.
This is because of the trade deficit.
That's thanks to the FRB system. Japan works hard, makes cars, and exports them to the United States, but all they get is a piece of paper called a dollar, which they then use to buy U.S. Treasury bonds, and the benefits don't flow back to Japan.
That money is used by Silicon Valley to run the cloud, Japan pays it huge amounts of money, and it is used to buy large amounts of unusable weapons in the event of a Taiwan emergency.
However, the system had already collapsed, so that's when Trump came on the scene.
The foundation of this is the FRB. Japan is being robbed of the useless paper called dollars issued by the FRB, and huge amounts of money from Japan's finances by Wall Street in the US and the City of London, but Japan has no say in it. Why?
This is because Japan has been a colony with US troops stationed there for over 70 years.
Almost for 100 years? Why? have a huge military in the Far East? Asia has been peaceful for 300 years without the Deep State.
Trump is trying to get rid of the deep state and move things in the right direction, but his urging to invest is still exploitative.
It's outrageous that investments on Wall Street will also become "money to buy up Japan."
Japanese people never say such things. But if Americans don't know, they will remain ignorant.
And until now, they have never mentioned anything about trade deficits, thanks to Trump, Just before the "deep state" was trying to destroy the United States.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh