Trump KILLING HIS PRESIDENCY, the recession may be coming
Grocery bills expose Trump’s broken tariff promises
We are told, almost daily, that everything is “fine.” Prices rise, wages stagnate, and Donald Trump insists that fairy-tale economics will somehow deliver prosperity. But for ordinary Americans staring at their grocery receipts, the illusion is wearing thin. Coffee, eggs, and other staples are up double digits. Wholesale produce has surged more than 40 percent. The promises of quick relief are nowhere to be found. Instead, households are bearing the brunt of policies that were sold as cost-cutting miracles but have proven to be nothing more than import taxes passed on directly to consumers.
Trump’s defenders now say, almost dismissively, that “prices go up every year.” Where were those voices when inflation spiked globally during the Biden administration? Republicans branded it “Bidenflation,” as if a White House alone could control global energy shocks, pandemic supply chain breakdowns, and war-driven food disruptions. Yet today, under Trump’s tariffs, those same critics suddenly moonlight as amateur economists, explaining away grocery hikes as part of the normal cycle. This selective outrage reveals what has always been true: the concern was never about the economics, but about the politics.
The economics, however, are unavoidable. Tariffs are taxes. When Walmart, Target, and Kroger import goods, they pay the tax, and because grocery profit margins are razor thin—often 1 to 2 percent—they cannot absorb the cost. They pass it on. Every shopper feels it at the register. Economists understand this. Every eighth-grade civics teacher understands this. Yet Trump insists foreign countries are footing the bill, just as Mexico was supposedly going to pay for the border wall. The result is higher prices for the very base that cheered these policies in the first place.
Meanwhile, Trump continues to spin fables about the American economy. Big, beautiful factories are coming back any day now, we’re told, even as the manufacturing index just saw its steepest drop since the depths of the pandemic. We were promised lower drug prices, $2 gasoline, and grocery bills that would shrink. None of it has materialized. Instead, Americans see layoffs—Amazon cutting more than 22,000 jobs this year, John Deere shedding workers, tech firms retrenching. Wages lag while living costs climb, and the supposed dealmaker-in-chief has produced only erratic tariffs, political meddling in the Federal Reserve, and an antagonistic regulatory climate.
The parallels to history are troubling. In 1929, the Smoot-Hawley tariffs turned a downturn into the Great Depression. Trump’s playbook looks disturbingly similar. If this trajectory continues, we may face a uniquely punishing scenario: stagflation. Unlike a standard recession, where demand collapses and prices fall, a Trump-driven downturn would likely see job losses without relief at the checkout line. Tariffs would keep prices elevated even as hiring slows, leaving families squeezed from both ends.
The contradictions do not end there. Under Biden, stimulus checks were vilified as dangerous socialism, reckless handouts, proof of a failed state. Now, under Trump, proposals for a so-called “DOGE dividend” are cheered by the same base that scorned relief under Democrats. Fraud investigations that were touted as evidence of government waste have produced zero arrests, and the promises of accountability have evaporated. These double standards reflect not an economic philosophy but a cult-like devotion to one man, regardless of results.
And results are what matter. Families cannot pay grocery bills with rhetoric about China paying tariffs. They cannot afford rent with fantasies about manufacturing renaissances. They cannot escape higher prices by pretending cause and effect no longer apply. The painful irony is that the very communities most loyal to Trump are among those hit hardest. Rural families who depend on affordable groceries, middle-class workers in industries vulnerable to retaliation, seniors on fixed incomes—these are the people paying for policies sold to them as protection.
None of this is to minimize the complexity of global economics. Inflation is shaped by forces beyond any single administration. But leadership matters. Competence matters. Transparency matters. Under Biden, inflation peaked but declined faster than in most wealthy nations, thanks to stabilization policies and strategic relief. Under Trump, by contrast, inflation is being manufactured through avoidable tariffs and chaotic policymaking. That distinction is crucial.
So the question for voters is simple: are you better off today than you were a year ago? Are you getting ahead, or falling behind? If the answer is the latter, it is worth asking who promised you cheaper groceries, who promised you a stronger paycheck, who told you other countries would foot the bill. And it is worth recognizing who benefits from your loyalty: not your family, not your community, but politicians who trade in grievance while leaving you with the bill.
The hope is that someone within Trump’s orbit convinces him of the need for an off-ramp—a way to unwind tariffs before the damage deepens. Yet Trump has staked his brand on being the ultimate negotiator. To back down now would be to admit failure. That makes a course correction politically unlikely, even as the economic costs mount.
In the end, the fairy tales collide with arithmetic. You cannot slap taxes on imports without raising consumer prices. You cannot promise shrinking grocery bills while driving up wholesale food costs. You cannot rail against socialism while proposing stimulus checks. Americans deserve honesty about how the economy works. They deserve policies that prioritize their financial security, not a leader’s ego. If they connect the dots between what they pay at the register and who imposed the tariffs driving those prices higher, accountability may finally arrive—not at the supermarket, but at the ballot box.
What do you think of Trump’s tariffs? Let me know in the comments below, and don't forget to share this post if you found it valuable.
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He’s doing the same thing to himself and his beloved Rethuglican party—a few of whom are suddenly announcing they’re “not seeking reelection.” Ain’t that something? They’re running for the hills aka running for cover.
The question is—who, among us are going to put out a welcome mat? Well, I’ll say right now—I don’t trust them, I don’t trust anyone who has tied on to the Drump wagon of lies and filth. Not today, not tomorrow, not ever! They can all pound sand!
RefuseFascism.org
Please plan to join us in FLOODING THE STREETS of DC beginning Nov 5 and peaceful protesting until Trump is forced to leave office. This will take millions of US!