uhmmmm
which word did you not understand?
uhmmmm
which word did you not understand?
well i don't prescribe to the WSJ so i haven't read the full article. since it focuses on the economics of 1700s industries, it would be simple to raise serious questions about any point raised by the author.
fuck i have to find a way to make money of some of you. the opposite of chapo trap house - sanger's prenatal care center
well i don't prescribe to the WSJ so i haven't read the full article. since it focuses on the economics of 1700s industries, it would be simple to raise serious questions about any point raised by the author.
fuck i have to find a way to make money of some of you. the opposite of chapo trap house - sanger's prenatal care center
well i don't prescribe to the WSJ so i haven't read the full article. since it focuses on the economics of 1700s industries, it would be simple to raise serious questions about any point raised by the author.
fuck i have to find a way to make money of some of you. the opposite of chapo trap house - sanger's prenatal care center
i read some peace by pat buchanan that was similarly titled. "from the 1869 - 1900, GDP quadrupled under tariff".
yes it was all tariff and not the gold rush
cool
i make alot of money being a DNC strategist
it would blow your mind how many backroom deals are made with all the corps the base hates
haha
This is the same media that is full of shit. Yes
Between 1816 and the end of the Second World War, the U.S. had one of the highest average tariff rates on manufacturing imports in the world. Given that the country enjoyed an exceptionally high degree of "natural" protection due to high transportation costs at least until the 1870s, we can say that the U.S. industries were literally the most protected in the world until 1945
ok then - in case you missed it - from the wikapedia link you posted above:
Tariffs in United States history - Wikipedia
Between 1816 and the end of the Second World War, the U.S. had one of the highest average tariff rates on manufacturing imports in the world. Given that the country enjoyed an exceptionally high degree of "natural" protection due to high transportation costs at least until the 1870s, we can say that the U.S. industries were literally the most protected in the world until 1945