Do you understand our previous course was unsustainable?
I agree with this. A country that produces nothing, ultimately dies as a financial superpower. Net exports must exceed net imports.
Our primary exports have transitioned over 400 years, from furs, to lumber, to metals, to grains, and then eventually manufactured goods during WW2. In the 1980's and 1990's, our exports changed from physical to intellectual, we became the technology leader of the world. Most of us could see where this was headed 30 years ago, you can't move manufacturing out of a country without Engineering soon following, and you can't move Engineering out of a country without Research soon following.
So to those who say "our exports need not be physical", they're right in the short term, but it's hard to outsource one part of a vertical integration without another country expanding on what you've now taught them. People freak out about China stealing technology, and it does happen, but we handed them more "second-generation" technology on a silver platter than they will ever steal from our "latest-generation" technology.
So for this, I was advocating tariffs 30+ years ago. Although implementing them today still is still a good idea, it is very late in the game, most of the horses have already left the barn. At this point, it's not about protecting American manufacturing and limiting how much we help fund the growth of our technology in other countries, but rather just saving the last meager threads of our former might.
What did you want the gubmit to do?
A clear and consistent plan, that doesn't change every week, based on one man's personal dealings with another. Fiscal policy is to be set by Congress, and implemented by the Executive. It is not to be set and implemented by just one man.
A little “chaos” might do us a lot of good, but I know you’ll never see it that way.
It will do some good for some lucky winners, and some bad for those who did careful planning that was undone by the whims of one man. To consistently win in business, we need to plan, and that requires a set of rules that aren't changing without reason. Hard work put into careful planning and strategy is the only way to remove luck (good or bad), and actually ensure some level of success.
On our current trajectory, the careful planning of any business can be totally up-ended overnight. We may need tariffs, I believe they're a good thing, but I have serious problems with the implementation.