Summary

After campaigning on promises to reduce costs for the working class, Donald Trump has largely gone silent on cost-of-living issues since his election.

In a recent interview, he admitted he could not restore grocery prices to 2019 levels without a recession.

While gas prices and groceries are already falling, Trump’s policies focus on government cuts and HB-1 visa expansions, which may harm his base.

Instead of addressing working-class concerns, he has turned to controversial ideas like buying Greenland or reclaiming the Panama Canal, drawing global criticism.

  • @Gammelfisch
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    2710 hours ago

    The stupid US voters copied the idiot Russians, Germans, Chinese and Japanese from the 1920’s and 30’s. The MAGAts are completely clueless about the shit that will hit the fan.

    • @[email protected]
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      -129 hours ago

      The US in 2024 is incredibly far removed from any of those countries in the 1920’s and 1930’s. Sorry but this comparison doesn’t make sense to me.

  • @DontRedditMyLemmy
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    36 hours ago

    Does anyone have a summary of all his “on day one” promises?

  • @BetaBlake
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    2710 hours ago

    I wish he’d go silent forever

    • Diplomjodler
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      4413 hours ago

      The Democrats are to blame, of course.

      • @normalexit
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        9 hours ago

        They opened the door wide open for Trump.to walk through. I blame them.

        Running an 82 year old man who has noticeable cognitive decline and swapping candidates without a primary were very avoidable icebergs the Dems steered into.

        Edit: the downvotes are interesting. It’s not a popular message, but he very obviously wasn’t suitable to run. He wasted all of our collective time to make a convincing argument.

        • TimmyDeanSausage
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          3311 hours ago

          Sure. That doesn’t change the fact that 77 million Americans voted for him. It doesn’t change the fact that the GOP ran him again, despite him being a twice impeached (now) convicted felon. It doesn’t change the fact that he had more big moneyed interests contributing to his campaign than ever before.

          We can criticize bad strategy without misplacing blame. The dems ran a candidate that beat Trump with a wide margin last time. They are completely out of touch with their base, so they didn’t realize how much the circumstances had changed. Also, swapping candidates mid campaign, IMHO, was kind of brilliant. It completely threw Trumps team off. They had a whole strategy for Biden, spent millions on attack ads against him, then were forced to scramble up a new strategy with very little time. I enjoyed watching that. I also watched all of the debate’s and many of Harris’ speeches. I felt that she was a clearly better candidate. She was clear on her message/plans, relatable, competent, intelligent, relatively classy when speaking about her opponent, and she constantly talked about working class issues. The media’s portrayal of her ignoring working class issues, and that being why she lost, is the complete opposite of what I witnessed with my eyes and ears. All of that is to say, although I am certainly not some huge Harris fan, I felt she was competent/intelligent enough, and was far better than either of the other options.

          The people who are to blame are the people who ran Trump, the people who voted for him, and the people who sat this one out because there just wasn’t enough info/evidence to sway them one way or the other (/s).

          • @CharlesDarwin
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            610 hours ago

            zomg! {clutches pearls}

            Are you blaming…the voters? Well, my stars!

            /staggers off to find a fainting couch and some smelling salts…

          • @normalexit
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            1011 hours ago

            If he would have gracefully stepped down before the election cycle began and they ran someone who spoke to the issues of the people, I think we would have had a drastically different result. The candidate swap was necessary after the disastrous debate performance – but if we started with a stronger, more coherent, candidate we wouldn’t be here. If the Dems focused on delivering for the American people instead of turning Palestine into a smoldering parking lot costing over 22 billion dollars, we wouldn’t be here. If they made any attempt to fix the concerns of the people over healthcare and the growing oligarchy running the show, we wouldn’t be here.

            They are bad at politics, messaging, and engaging what used to be their base. They offer no hope, just more of the same.

            I want to see intelligent candidates out there who know how to deliver results. There are people like that out there, the Dems need to find and promote them. Nancy Pelosi just propped up a 74 year old cancer patient over AOC, so they continue to not learn any lessons and follow their existing playbook.

            • TimmyDeanSausage
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              810 hours ago

              I agree with all of this. But, none of that makes Trump a better, or equally bad, option. He’s far worse on every issue you mentioned. Sometimes it’s necessary to look at where we are and act accordingly. We’re not living in a world were we have access to real progressive candidates of the likes I want to see. Our democracy has been on life support for the past 24 years, and was seriously ill for 20 years before that. We have more aggressive treatment options, that could work, and a sizeable portion of the country decided to pull the plug instead. Now we all have to deal with the fallout.

              Left leaning people that abstained over Israel or working class issues, do you feel you made the right choice? Are those issues going in the right direction now that Trump is the incoming admin? Do any of you feel that teaching the DNC a lesson was worth risking minority American’s rights, increased wealth disparity, necessary funding for Ukraine’s defense, and our strategic relationships with many of our nation’s greatest allies?

              • @normalexit
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                19 hours ago

                I had a kamala yard sign, she was the better candidate. It’s just a shame she didn’t have the time or the effective messaging to convince the masses.

                • TimmyDeanSausage
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                  38 hours ago

                  Yeah, I guess I just don’t buy that there was a failing in her messaging. I think many Americans bought into a very unwise narrative, or got comfortable through the Biden admin and checked out. For all of Biden’s faults, at least he was stable, predictable. I think people became complacent through that. They decided that who the sitting president is doesn’t make THAT much of a difference. Unfortunately, when we have an admin that brings us people like Lina Khan while the other brings us Ajit Pai (and all of the current right wing SC justices), it makes a very big difference.

        • @[email protected]
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          412 hours ago

          You’re right. Dems also could have immediately begun prosecuting Trump for the insurrection and other crimes, but waited 2 years to begin to ensure no elites would actually be held accountable. This combined with Dems’ refusal to hold a primary election resulted in an (in no way whatsoever) stunning defeat.

          Add in Biden policies like record oil and gas drilling while the planet burns, and full-throated genocide enablement for Israeli war criminals…why do people think any other outcome was possible? Are they so susceptible to the pathetic Dem gaslighting that “no, actually economy is doing great, and Biden is FDR 2.0”? Sad if true.

    • @Eldritch
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      813 hours ago

      IKR? How is this news.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 hours ago

    What did you expect from right-wing populist lol. P.S. As there is political polarization in US as they say, keep in mind that bad actors like Russia try to do “divide and rule” while Trump presidency. That’s how Russians (almost) always win.

  • @CharlesDarwin
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    1010 hours ago

    This was as predictable as the tides.

  • @[email protected]
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    1511 hours ago

    Trump going silent is indeed newsworthy. If only he would go silent on all the other topics as well.

  • @[email protected]
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    7114 hours ago

    What? No! I really thought THIS time he was our man. I know last time was a free for all for rich people and cronies, but this time would be different!!

  • Capt. Wolf
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    4414 hours ago

    Of course he has. This is what bourgeoisie narcissists do. He got the vote from the suckers and morons who support him. He got their money. He’s now in a position of absolute power. He got everything he wanted. Unless he needs another disposable goon squad, what use does he have for them?

  • @Hobbes_Dent
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    4114 hours ago

    Oh weird the proven idiot liar was stupidly lying and we believed him.

  • @kmartburrito
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    1111 hours ago

    Surely he wasn’t giving empty promises, right? I mean he’s got such a high level of perceived authenticity, this is hard to believe. Must be fake news, for absolutely no reason I can provide evidence to support.

  • @[email protected]
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    13 hours ago

    Working class still has to pay for the rampant inflation caused by fully forgiven PPP loans, Covid checks sent out to every household, tax cuts for the wealthy during the previous Trump term, and 4.5 TRILLION in clandestine bailouts given to big banks in 2019 for bad mortgage backed security loans.

    On September 17th, 2019, two days before President Trump signed an executive order to fast-track flu vaccine development due to a ‘potential pandemic flu outbreak’, the Fed started issuing trillions to 24 financial institutions. More precisely, such funds were issued to the same banks previously bailed out in 2008. Out of the $4.5 trillion in loans for Q4 2019, the bulk of it went to Goldman Sachs (103 instances), JPMorgan Chase (197 instances), Deutsche Bank (200 instances), and Citigroup (143 instances).

    https://tokenist.com/fed-finally-identifies-banks-received-4-5t-q4-2019-repo-program/

    • @Zachariah
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      512 hours ago

      Thank you, DogPeePoo, for this counter to the common bullshit narrative.

      • @[email protected]
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        812 hours ago

        You’re welcome.

        It’s pretty much fucked. We are headed for Weimer Republic type hyper inflation. The 2008 financial crisis never ended, it’s been a can kicking fest and the Fed bailouts happen more and more frequently without any attempt at course correction for solvency.

  • @Bieren
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    2814 hours ago

    Just wait until his tariff plan solves all the issues. /s

    • @P1nkman
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      1313 hours ago

      But he promised he would make us richer! That’s what he said. “The tariffs will make us richer!”

      Narrator: What they didn’t understand is that “us” referred to himself and his friends. This is what happens with poor a educational system.

  • @dhork
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    14 hours ago

    Promises made, promises kept!*

    ~* = Offer only valid for Broligarchs who give Donald Trump cash~