The Wall Boulevard Magazine’s editorial board revealed a punchy Saturday op-ed checklist the entire failed causes for President Trump’s tariff plan, mentioning a declining development in industry and production culpability following signed sanctions.
Trump on Saturday imposed vital price lists on Canada, Mexico and China, fueling a possible industry warfare.
“Tariffs on imports from Canada, Mexico, and China are SIGNED!” White Area spokesperson Harrison Fields posted on X. “This bold move holds these countries accountable for stopping illegal immigration and the flow of dangerous drugs like fentanyl.”
“Leaving China aside, Mr. Trump’s justification for this economic assault on the neighbors makes no sense,” the board wrote.
Writers challenged the concept exorbitant pricing for imports and exports would urge neighboring governments to stem the drift of illicit medication.
“White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt says they’ve ‘enabled illegal drugs to pour into America. But drugs have flowed into the U.S. for decades, and will continue to do so as long as Americans keep using them,” learn the Wall Boulevard Magazine op-ed.
“Neither country can stop it.”
The board denied the perception that expanding the price of trade offers between borders would result in a satisfying economic system.
“Mr. Trump sometimes sounds as if the U.S. shouldn’t import anything at all, that America can be a perfectly closed economy making everything at home. This is called autarky, and it isn’t the world we live in, or one that we should want to live in, as Mr. Trump may soon find out,” they defined.
“Take the U.S. auto industry, which is really a North American industry because supply chains in the three countries are highly integrated. In 2024 Canada supplied almost 13% of U.S. imports of auto parts and Mexico nearly 42%. Industry experts say a vehicle made on the continent goes back and forth across borders a half dozen times or more, as companies source components and add value in the most cost-effective ways,” they added.
“And everyone benefits.”
The board alleged that the automobile trade, farm items and oil would be afflicted by the president’s new insurance policies.
“None of this is supposed to happen under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement that Mr. Trump negotiated and signed in his first term. The U.S. willingness to ignore its treaty obligations, even with friends, won’t make other countries eager to do deals,” they wrote.
“Maybe Mr. Trump will claim victory and pull back if he wins some token concessions. But if a North American trade war persists, it will qualify as one of the dumbest in history.”