On April 2nd, President Donald J. Trump did something no other modern president has had the spine to do. He declared “Liberation Day” and slapped sweeping tariffs on the very nations that have been gutting the American economy for decades. A 10 percent universal tariff across all imports. Targeted, punitive tariffs up to 34 percent on bad actors like China. And guess what? We should be furious—not at Trump—but at the spineless presidents before him who let things get this bad in the first place.
Let’s be clear: these tariffs didn’t start a trade war. They responded to one.
For decades, our so-called allies and trading partners have been gleefully waging economic warfare on the United States, with the full permission — no, the encouragement — of prior administrations. China flooded our markets with cheap steel, violating trade norms and collapsing American mills. The European Union protected its own industries while slapping barriers on ours. Japan, Taiwan, and others enjoyed one-sided access to our consumers while shielding their own markets with layers of red tape and tariffs.
And what did our leaders do in response? They looked the other way. Smiled. Shook hands. Signed one-sided trade deals. Sold us out. They told us it was for the “global good,” for “peace,” for “prosperity.” But the only people prospering were in Beijing, Brussels, and Tokyo. In small-town Ohio, Detroit, and western Pennsylvania, all we got were pink slips and boarded-up factories.
Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs are long overdue justice. They’re a correction to a rigged game that’s been hurting American businesses, workers, and families for far too long.
Let’s talk steel and aluminum. In 2018, President Trump placed a 25 percent tariff on foreign steel and 10 percent on aluminum to push back against dumping and reclaim our national security edge. That wasn’t a rash decision — it was backed by years of data showing our dependence on foreign metals made us vulnerable. Yet in that time, D.C. elites told us to let it happen. That “free trade” meant letting foreign nations cheat while we played by the rules.
Recommended
Even our farmers haven’t been spared. Take California’s almond growers — part of a $23.6 billion ag export economy. Under previous administrations, they were hung out to dry as countries like China and India retaliated against our lack of backbone by imposing their own crushing tariffs. Instead of defending our farmers, those in power shrugged and said it was the cost of doing business in a “global economy.”
It’s nonsense. And it’s unforgivable.
Now, the hand-wringers in the media — and predictably, the Biden administration holdovers — are moaning that these tariffs could raise consumer prices. That they could cause friction. That they might prompt retaliation.
Good.
Let them squirm.
Because the goal here isn’t to make life easy for globalist bureaucrats. It’s to bring fairness back to American trade. To restore dignity to American work. And to put America first — unapologetically.
Treasury Secretary Bessent was right to warn other nations not to retaliate. The message is simple: this isn’t about starting fights, it’s about ending decades of economic surrender. For too long, the U.S. has subsidized the success of other nations while they’ve exploited our openness. That ends now.
And let’s talk about the bigger picture. These tariffs aren’t just about economics — they’re about sovereignty and national security. COVID-19 exposed what happens when America offshores everything from microchips to medicine. We were left scrambling. Now, with these tariffs, we have a shot at rebuilding critical industries here at home.
We’ve heard for years that American manufacturing is a relic of the past. That we should get used to “service sector” jobs. That we can just code apps and order stuff from China. But what happens when China turns off the tap? What happens when global supply chains buckle?
We need American factories. We need American steel. We need Americans building things again.
Tariffs may cause short-term adjustments, but they pave the way for long-term independence. And that’s worth every penny.
The truth is, these tariffs are a moral issue. When we allow foreign governments to manipulate currency, exploit labor, and dump products in our markets, we’re enabling injustice. And when our own leaders look the other way, they’re complicit.
President Trump isn’t just fixing trade — he’s exposing the rot. He’s showing us how many American politicians were more loyal to global think tanks than to the people who elected them.
And that’s what really stings the establishment.
Because Trump — like Reagan before him — puts the American people first. Not in rhetoric. Not in focus-grouped slogans. But in action. Bold, unapologetic, unmistakable action.
Where Reagan challenged the Soviets, Trump is challenging a corrupt globalist system. And just like Reagan was right then, Trump is right now.
If you’re not angry about these tariffs, you’re not paying attention. We should be furious — that it took this long to get here. Furious at presidents who smiled while our industries died. Furious at politicians who used middle America as a bargaining chip for Davos clout.
But thanks to Trump, the tide is turning.
He may be the only president since Reagan who’s had the courage to stare down the world and say, “You will not take advantage of America anymore.”
And for that, every American — every farmer, every factory worker, every small business owner — should be standing and cheering.
Because it’s about time someone stood up for us. Shame on the ones who didn’t. And thank God for the one who finally did.
Join the conversation as a VIP Member