Look at Detroit, once the wealthiest city in the world in the 1950s, reduced to filing for bankruptcy by 2013. The Rust Belt—stretching from Ohio to Michigan to Pennsylvania—became a graveyard of forgotten dreams, with cities like Youngstown, Flint, and Gary, Indiana, fading into shadows of their former selves. This wasn’t a natural decline; it was a deliberate betrayal. Trade deals like NAFTA and China’s entry into the WTO opened the floodgates for foreign goods, while Chinese companies stole U.S. designs and patents, flooding markets with knockoff products that undercut American innovators. The result was a gutted middle class, abandoned factories, and communities left to rot—all while globalist elites and complicit politicians preached the virtues of “free trade.”
Yet, the naysayers who claim “manufacturing will never come back” are dead wrong. Even today, in 2025, over 570,000 Americans work in auto parts manufacturing, and nearly 1,200 auto parts companies still call Detroit home. These are not relics—they are proof of an industry that refuses to die. And now, Donald Trump is their defender, wielding the tool he’s championed since the Reagan era: tariffs.
Trump’s Tariff Crusade: A Vision Vindicated
From his 1988 critiques of Japan to his 2000 book The America We Deserve, Trump has argued that tariffs are the antidote to unfair trade. By 2016, he made tariffs a cornerstone of his campaign, proposing 45% duties on Chinese goods and 35% on Mexican imports to bring jobs home. In his first term (2017–2021), he delivered: 25% tariffs on steel, 10% on aluminum, and up to 25% on Chinese imports reshaped global supply chains, forcing companies to rethink offshoring. Now, in his second term as the 47th President, Trump’s vision is bearing fruit. Since January 20, 2025, he’s claimed over $5–10 trillion in new U.S. investments—Apple’s $500 billion in manufacturing and training, TSMC’s $100 billion in Arizona semiconductor plants, Saudi Arabia’s $600 billion pledge, and countless others. Skeptics quibble, claiming some investments were pre-existing or speculative, but even at the low end—say, $3 trillion—it’s a staggering leap beyond the paltry sums secured under Joe Biden, whose globalist policies left America’s heartland to wither.
These investments aren’t random; they’re the legacy of Trump’s first-term tariffs, which raised the cost of imports and incentivized domestic production. Apple’s shift to U.S. manufacturing began in response to 2018 tariffs on Chinese components. Hyundai and Posco Holdings, which recently announced U.S. investments, considered steel mills during Trump’s first term, only to shelve them amid pandemic uncertainty and Biden’s weak trade stance. Now, with Trump back and threatening universal tariffs of 10–20%—or 60% on China—companies are racing to build in America, from NVIDIA’s $500 billion AI infrastructure to Pratt Industries’ $5 billion for 5,000 Rust Belt jobs. Even Biden kept Trump’s tariffs, a silent admission of their power. Trump’s vision, forged over 35 years, is proving unstoppable: tariffs work.
The Media’s Inflation Lie: Markets, Not Tariffs, Set Prices
The media, however, refuses to celebrate this revival. Instead, outlets like MSN churn out hit pieces like “China Responds to Trump’s Trade Pressure with Countermeasures,” amplifying Beijing’s complaints while ignoring America’s gains. Their favorite scare tactic? Claiming Trump’s tariffs will ignite inflation, driving up costs for consumers. But this narrative crumbles under scrutiny. As I detailed in my article, “The Rise and Fall of Steel Prices” (nosocialism.com, April 2025), the market—not tariffs—ultimately determines prices. When Trump imposed 25% steel tariffs in 2018, prices spiked briefly as markets adjusted, but by 2019, steel prices began to fall, dropping below pre-tariff levels in many cases. Why? Because markets adapt. If consumers and businesses won’t pay inflated prices, producers lower costs or innovate to compete—exactly what happened with steel. Far from fueling inflation, Trump’s first term saw lower overall inflation than the Obama or Biden administrations. Under Obama, inflation averaged 1.8% annually (2009–2017); under Biden, it surged to 5.7% at its peak in 2022, driven by supply chain chaos and energy costs. Trump’s first term? Inflation averaged just 1.9% (2017–2021), despite tariffs. The media’s silence on this is deafening. They’ll scream about tariffs but won’t mention the real inflation driver under Biden: the cancellation of the Keystone XL pipeline. In 2021, Biden’s decision to halt the pipeline sent oil prices soaring from $30 to $130 per barrel by 2022. Since everything in America—food, goods, you name it—moves by diesel, this fivefold spike rippled through the economy, jacking up costs for every consumer. Yet, MSN and their ilk never uttered a word about this inflationary disaster. Why? Because it doesn’t fit their globalist agenda.
The Real Betrayal: Why Were Our Communities Abandoned?
The media’s obsession with inflation myths and China’s talking points distracts from the real question: why were America’s communities allowed to die? The Rust Belt’s decline wasn’t inevitable—it was engineered. NAFTA, signed in 1994, opened the door for companies to flee to Mexico. China’s 2001 WTO entry unleashed a flood of cheap goods, backed by stolen U.S. designs and subsidized production. Currency manipulation and lax environmental rules gave foreign firms an unfair edge, while American workers paid the price. Entire towns—schools, businesses, families—were wiped out. Detroit went from the world’s richest city to a bankrupt shell. Gary, Indiana, once a steel powerhouse, became a symbol of decay. This was economic warfare, and our leaders did nothing.
Now, Trump is fighting back. His tariffs are a direct challenge to the globalist system that enriched corporations and foreign regimes at America’s expense. They’re a signal to companies: build here, hire here, or pay the price. And the world is responding. From Saudi Arabia’s $600 billion to France’s $20 billion in logistics to South Korea’s steel investments, foreign firms are pouring money into U.S. factories, data centers, and jobs. Domestic giants like Apple, NVIDIA, and IBM are doubling down, driven by tariffs, tax incentives, and the undeniable momentum of Trump’s vision.
A New Dawn for America’s Heartland
The naysayers can keep shouting that manufacturing is dead, that the Rust Belt is gone, that America can’t compete. But the truth is in the numbers: 570,000 Americans still work in auto parts manufacturing. Nearly 1,200 auto parts companies thrive in Detroit. These are the seeds of a revival, and Trump is their champion. Instead of parroting China’s complaints or peddling inflation scare stories, the media should be asking why our leaders let places like Detroit collapse. They should be investigating how globalist policies—NAFTA, WTO, unchecked IP theft—stripped away the middle class and left entire states to wither.
This is the great shift—a reckoning for globalism and a rebirth for American manufacturing. Trump’s tariffs, rooted in decades of conviction, are bringing jobs back, rebuilding communities, and restoring hope. Forget the media’s quibbling over whether it’s $5 trillion or $10 trillion in new investments; the number doesn’t matter as much as the reality. Factories are reopening. Jobs are returning. Towns are stirring. The era of globalism’s free ride is over, and America is building again. The Rust Belt is rising, and Trump is leading the charge—not just for Detroit, but for every forgotten corner of this great nation.
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