C2025-04

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Preek Tweede Paasdag 2025 | MJSchuurman, Lukas 24, Emmaüs
Preek Tweede Paasdag 2025 | MJSchuurman, Lukas 24, Emmaüs
Preek Tweede Paasdag 2025Schriftlezing: Lukas 24:13-35Gemeente van onze Heere Jezus Christus,De Emmaüsgangers – dat zijn wij.Het is niet alleen een verhaal van 2000 jaar terug – dat zek…
·mjschuurman.wordpress.com·
Preek Tweede Paasdag 2025 | MJSchuurman, Lukas 24, Emmaüs
Trade deficit is like credit card devts
Trade deficit is like credit card devts
Trump LOVES the poorly educated. They believe all his lies‼️ MAGA doesn’t listen to economists, doctors, scientists, or any other kind of expert.
·x.com·
Trade deficit is like credit card devts
There’s a reason global leaders aren’t... - Oregon's Bay Area
There’s a reason global leaders aren’t... - Oregon's Bay Area

There’s a reason global leaders aren’t picking up the phone. While Donald Trump storms into trade wars like a jilted Monopoly tycoon with a Twitter addiction, the rest of the world is quietly reaching for the receipts. Not just figuratively, literally. They’re holding trillions in U.S. Treasury bonds and debating how fast or how publicly to remind us who’s really cornered.

Trump’s economic chaos isn’t just bad policy. It’s an accelerant on dry tinder. The tariffs, the market manipulation, the self-serving tweets about “great times to buy DJT” hours before policy reversals, these aren’t isolated stumbles. They’re signs of a much deeper crisis unfolding: a breakdown of the postwar monetary order. The world sees it, even if Trump doesn’t.

Let’s start with the debt. One reader put it plainly: this year alone, the U.S. is on track to refinance $10 trillion of maturing debt, at more than double the interest rates of a decade ago. What we borrowed at 2% in 2015, we’re now refinancing at 4.5% or higher. That’s an extra $250 billion a year in interest. Altogether, we’ll soon be spending over $1.2 trillion annually just to service the debt, more than our entire defense budget. And that’s before Trump’s next round of tax cuts for billionaires.

You don’t have to be an economist to know what happens when you max out every credit card and then shred the bill collectors’ voicemails. You just have to read history. We’ve seen this kind of financial brinkmanship before, in 1929, in 1971, in 2008. But what we’re staring down now, as Ray Dalio warned last week on Meet the Press, could be worse than all of it.

Dalio isn’t some liberal firebrand. He founded the world’s largest hedge fund and he’s about as apolitical as they come. But his message was clear: Trump’s policies aren’t merely reckless, they’re destabilizing the very foundation of the global economy. The U.S. isn’t just flirting with a recession. We're toying with the collapse of the dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency, the one thing that’s kept our paper empire afloat since Bretton Woods. If we lose that privilege, it’s not a downgrade. It’s a reclassification from global superpower to banana republic with nukes.

And yet, Trump struts around like he’s playing 4D chess, while the rest of the world quietly plays actual chess, with our king boxed into a corner. As Part 1 argued, Canada’s new Prime Minister Mark Carney may have orchestrated a slow, deliberate bleed of U.S. Treasury bonds in coordination with EU and Japanese allies. A financial firing squad triggered not by rage, but by risk management. In case of emergency, break the dollar. Did Trump pause the tariffs because he saw the light? No. He blinked because the bond markets did. Because consumer sentiment collapsed to levels not seen since 1981. Because rich friends started calling. Because the Dow twitched like it knew something, and somebody absolutely did, as trade volume in ETFs like SPY and TQQQ surged just minutes before the reversal. Because Marjorie Taylor Greene somehow turned into Warren Buffett for a week, buying all the right stocks before anyone else knew the “pause” was coming.

And if you think that’s hyperbole, Senator Elizabeth Warren is already demanding investigations. She’s called out the blatant market manipulation, the suspicious trades, the suspicious silences from regulatory agencies now stacked with loyalists and sycophants. She’s also calling out what others dare not: the weaponization of economic data. Because Trump isn’t just faking his negotiating skills, he’s faking the scoreboard. Fired the economists. Hushed the statisticians. Replaced Treasury projections with “vibes.” We’re now running the economy on delusion and Doge memes.

Meanwhile, the housing market is sputtering. Not collapsing yet, but definitely wheezing. Open houses in desirable neighborhoods are drawing crickets. Mortgage rates are bouncing near 6.6% and headed higher. Builders are slashing prices and stacking incentives, even as tariffs drive up construction costs. Affordability has become a theoretical concept. The average American can no longer afford the average American home.

And still, we’re told to believe everything’s fine. Trust the numbers. Trust the orange-tinted strongman with his echo chamber cabinet of billionaires and brand managers, who laugh about gutting veterans' benefits and firing teachers like it’s a Friday afternoon round of The Apprentice: Cabinet Edition. But here’s the thing: the world isn’t stupid. They see the grift. They’ve watched the collapse of independent institutions, the politicization of data, the attacks on the judiciary, the trillion-dollar debt refinancings, the cultic belief in a man who can’t keep his lies straight through a golf round. And unlike many Americans, they’re not afraid to hedge against that madness. This is a story about trust and how quickly it can erode, and how devastating the consequences when it’s gone. When countries no longer trust our numbers. When investors no longer trust our bonds. When even allies begin quietly preparing for our decline not because they want to, but because they have to.

This is less a trade war and more of an international intervention. The world is trying to wrest the wheel from a drunk driver who thinks he’s Moses parting the Red Sea. And the passengers? That’s us. Every taxpayer. Every bondholder. Every veteran. Every teacher. Every kid whose public school is now on the chopping block so Elon Musk can tweet about fraud and fire civil servants with disabilities.

Ray Dalio sees it. Elizabeth Warren sees it. Mark Carney saw it early. And if the rest of us don’t see it soon, we may not be in a position to do much about it at all.

History is watching. And the bond market is blinking red.

TradeWar #markcarney #BondMarket #elonmusk

·facebook.com·
There’s a reason global leaders aren’t... - Oregon's Bay Area
RTV Utrecht
RTV Utrecht
De ingrijpende verbouwing van het gemeentehuis in Leerdam kan beginnen. Burgemeester Sjors Fröhlich heeft deze week samen met de aannemer zijn handtekening gezet onder de overeenkomst. De kosten voor de klus zijn geraamd op 26 miljoen euro.
·rtvutrecht.nl·
RTV Utrecht
Kijken in de ziel van Rembrandt, 355 jaar na zijn dood
Kijken in de ziel van Rembrandt, 355 jaar na zijn dood
Rembrandt van Rijn stierf in 1669. Het is dus onmogelijk om de kunstschilder nog te interviewen. Toch doet journalist Coen Verbraak een poging voor de film Praten met De Nachtwacht.
·nos.nl·
Kijken in de ziel van Rembrandt, 355 jaar na zijn dood
Jeffrey Sachs, the influential economist and Columbia University professor, didn’t hold back this week when asked about Trump’s trade policy. “Mickey Mouse is smarter than him,” Sachs said bluntly, roasting the former president’s economic logic in front of an audience of stunned onlookers. Sachs was referring to Trump’s continued push for protectionism and high tariffs, strategies that economists across the spectrum have repeatedly criticized for backfiring on American businesses and consumers. Under the banner of economic populism, Trump introduced sweeping tariffs during his first term—particularly targeting China—only to spark retaliatory measures, market disruptions, and increased costs for U.S. manufacturers. “This isn’t strategy. It’s a cartoon version of economics,” Sachs added, calling Trump’s worldview “simplistic, short-sighted, and damaging to America’s role in global trade.” While Trump insists these policies are about “America First,” experts argue that the approach has...
Jeffrey Sachs, the influential economist and Columbia University professor, didn’t hold back this week when asked about Trump’s trade policy. “Mickey Mouse is smarter than him,” Sachs said bluntly, roasting the former president’s economic logic in front of an audience of stunned onlookers. Sachs was referring to Trump’s continued push for protectionism and high tariffs, strategies that economists across the spectrum have repeatedly criticized for backfiring on American businesses and consumers. Under the banner of economic populism, Trump introduced sweeping tariffs during his first term—particularly targeting China—only to spark retaliatory measures, market disruptions, and increased costs for U.S. manufacturers. “This isn’t strategy. It’s a cartoon version of economics,” Sachs added, calling Trump’s worldview “simplistic, short-sighted, and damaging to America’s role in global trade.” While Trump insists these policies are about “America First,” experts argue that the approach has...
Jeffrey Sachs, the influential economist and Columbia University professor, didn’t hold back this week when asked about Trump’s trade policy. “Mickey...
·facebook.com·
Jeffrey Sachs, the influential economist and Columbia University professor, didn’t hold back this week when asked about Trump’s trade policy. “Mickey Mouse is smarter than him,” Sachs said bluntly, roasting the former president’s economic logic in front of an audience of stunned onlookers. Sachs was referring to Trump’s continued push for protectionism and high tariffs, strategies that economists across the spectrum have repeatedly criticized for backfiring on American businesses and consumers. Under the banner of economic populism, Trump introduced sweeping tariffs during his first term—particularly targeting China—only to spark retaliatory measures, market disruptions, and increased costs for U.S. manufacturers. “This isn’t strategy. It’s a cartoon version of economics,” Sachs added, calling Trump’s worldview “simplistic, short-sighted, and damaging to America’s role in global trade.” While Trump insists these policies are about “America First,” experts argue that the approach has...
Trump dag 89: oa Hooggerechtshof blokkeert nieuwe deportatiepoging, Trump plaatst gemanipuleerde foto, 50.000 ambtenaren vervangen door partijloyalisten, gevluchte Afghanen moeten terug en aanval op Harvard was ‘foutje’
Trump dag 89: oa Hooggerechtshof blokkeert nieuwe deportatiepoging, Trump plaatst gemanipuleerde foto, 50.000 ambtenaren vervangen door partijloyalisten, gevluchte Afghanen moeten terug en aanval op Harvard was ‘foutje’
Nieuwe besluiten van Trump en consorten, en nieuwe fallout. Een overzicht van dag 89.
·reportersonline.nl·
Trump dag 89: oa Hooggerechtshof blokkeert nieuwe deportatiepoging, Trump plaatst gemanipuleerde foto, 50.000 ambtenaren vervangen door partijloyalisten, gevluchte Afghanen moeten terug en aanval op Harvard was ‘foutje’
‘We hebben een verkeerde gewoonte’: drie dermatologen vertellen wat elke dag douchen met je huid doet
‘We hebben een verkeerde gewoonte’: drie dermatologen vertellen wat elke dag douchen met je huid doet
De kans dat je dagelijks doucht is groot: natuurlijk voel je je graag schoon. Maar dat is niet altijd even slim voor de gezondheid van je huid. Hoe lijdt je huid onder te vaak douchen? En wat verstaan dermatologen onder ‘te vaak’? Drie huidspecialisten leggen uit hoe je zelf merkt dat je te veel doucht en wat dan wel ‘goed’ is. „Als ik patiënten vertel wat 20 minuten douchen per dag met hun huid doet, schrikken ze.”
·gelderlander.nl·
‘We hebben een verkeerde gewoonte’: drie dermatologen vertellen wat elke dag douchen met je huid doet
America Could Lose World Cup and Olympics
America Could Lose World Cup and Olympics
No one is coming to America anymore and we might end up losing the world cup and the olympics. Tourism fell by 12% last month, the most since COVID. Tourism ...
·youtube.com·
America Could Lose World Cup and Olympics
Pasen wordt zonnig en warm, ook dankzij late paasdagen
Pasen wordt zonnig en warm, ook dankzij late paasdagen
Hoewel het paasweer behoorlijk uiteenloopt vanwege de schuivende data van de paasdagen, kun je wel stellen dat de maanden maart en april geleidelijk warmer worden.
·nos.nl·
Pasen wordt zonnig en warm, ook dankzij late paasdagen
The situation in Gaza is no longer a war, but an unrestrained assault on civilians
The situation in Gaza is no longer a war, but an unrestrained assault on civilians
In the absence of any real military targets, Israel is waging a reckless offensive against those who are in no way involved in the fighting against it. Gazans are forced to choose between death and displacement to 'safe zones' that are far from safe
·haaretz.com·
The situation in Gaza is no longer a war, but an unrestrained assault on civilians
Trump dag 88: oa Trump wil van Powell af en van vroegschoolse educatie, 90% consumentenwaakhond ontslagen, capaciteit CECOT naar 80.000, Van Hollen ontmoet Garcia en Republikeinse senator bang voor Trump - Reporters Online
Trump dag 88: oa Trump wil van Powell af en van vroegschoolse educatie, 90% consumentenwaakhond ontslagen, capaciteit CECOT naar 80.000, Van Hollen ontmoet Garcia en Republikeinse senator bang voor Trump - Reporters Online
Nieuwe besluiten van Trump en consorten, en nieuwe fallout. Een overzicht van dag 88.
·reportersonline.nl·
Trump dag 88: oa Trump wil van Powell af en van vroegschoolse educatie, 90% consumentenwaakhond ontslagen, capaciteit CECOT naar 80.000, Van Hollen ontmoet Garcia en Republikeinse senator bang voor Trump - Reporters Online