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Trump's Aready Lost

Deep State swamp claims the new POTUS as its own...

BY OUT calculation, it took just 76 days for President Trump to get on board with the Clinton-Bush-Obama agenda, writes Bill Bonner in his Diary of a Rogue Economist.

Now there can be no doubt where he's headed. He's gone Full Empire.

Not that it was unexpected. But the speed with which the president abandoned his supporters and went over to the Deep State is breathtaking.

Among the noise and hubbub of the election campaign, there was one message coming from the Trump team that was music to our ears.

Middle East wars?

He was against them, he said.

He claimed to have opposed the 2003 attack on Iraq. He said it was one of the "worst mistakes" the country ever made.

As for further involvement, why waste American lives and American wealth on wars you can't win?

"America First," he said.

This was a refreshing position. It put the Republican neocons and Establishment Republicans against him; many went over to Hillary rather than risk giving up their think tank grants and consulting fees.

A 2013 poll showed 52% of Americans thought the US should "mind its own business internationally."

But the elite gained power and money from foreign wars; they weren't going to give them up. Non-entitlement spending in the swamp goes largely to cronies in the military-security industry.

But Donald Trump promised a "new foreign policy".

No more trying to be the world's policeman. No more fighting other people's battles...and making things worse. No more wasting American money and American lives on foolish, unwinnable wars.

Ending America's pointless and unsettling romp in the desert would be a good first move.

The bill for these misadventures is now said to be $7 trillion. As to Syria, Trump was typically direct. Don't attack the country, he warned Barack Obama in a 2013 tweet, or "MANY VERY BAD THINGS WILL HAPPEN..."

But then, last week...the last great hope for the Trump administration blew up in Syria. Now the neocons are delighted. And the cronies. And the zombies, too.

Here's the outlook: no real change to O'care. No cutbacks in entitlements. No attempt to balance the budget. No belt-tightening at the pudgy Pentagon. (Instead, it will get more money.)

And now this: The wars in the Middle East will not only go on...they will accelerate.

For now, the US is not only fighting terrorists. It is also fighting the people who are fighting the terrorists.

It's a perfect Deep State war: It is guaranteed neither to win nor to lose, but simply to go on indefinitely. This gives the insiders more and more of the nation's wealth to piddle away in absurd wars in preposterous places.

Meanwhile, Congress adjourned. When it returns in two weeks, it will confront another crisis of its own making.

Bloomberg reports:

"Government funding expires on April 28, which will give Congress five days to unveil, debate, and pass an enormous spending bill...or trigger a government shutdown.

"...'What a mess,' said Paul Brace, a congressional expert at Rice University in Houston, offering his own pessimistic view of the unified Republican control of the House and Senate so far under President Donald Trump. 'It was so much easier when all you had to do was oppose Obama.'

"House Republicans 'have differences of opinion. And they aren't just political differences. They are policy differences,' said Republican Senator Rob Portman of Ohio."

And so our incipient Doom Index is still flashing a warning.

It will be tough for Congress to come to terms with its budget. The debate will open old wounds and gouge new ones.

Already, the federal budget deficit is expected to average $1 trillion a year over the next 10 years.

Mr.Trump will want to spend more. We need to spend more on infrastructure, on the military...and to revive the economy...he'll argue.

Many House Republicans, especially the idealists in the Freedom Caucus, will find it difficult to go along.

Some will notice, cynically, that the whole program – including the attack on Syria – is little different from what Hillary had offered.

Consumer prices are already rising, others will note. Besides, who wants to go back to his home district after having signed on to $30 trillion of US debt?

Others, the activists, will want to back Trump. The Obama years have been disastrous, they will say. The typical household is little better off than it was at the bottom of the last recession.

Half of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck. And there are 66 million working-age adults without jobs, they'll report.

The feds must do something! Increase spending to stimulate the economy (and not coincidentally steer a few bucks to major campaign contributors and other important hacks).

The more financially alert among members of Congress will recognize that eight years of stimulus has done little to help the real economy.

These realists will see a runaway locomotive headed to a dangerous curve.

They'll want to know how the feds will finance huge new deficits just as the Fed tightens interest rates.

But the shrewdest among them will call their brokers.

The highest stock prices since the dot-com crash are based on the belief that, somehow, Team Trump will push through a corporate tax cut, leaving businesses with more after-tax money.

"That's not going to happen," they will say to themselves.

They will want to get out of the stock market before other investors catch on.

New York Times best-selling finance author Bill Bonner founded The Agora, a worldwide community for private researchers and publishers, in 1979. Financial analysts within the group exposed and predicted some of the world's biggest shifts since, starting with the fall of the Soviet Union back in the late 1980s, to the collapse of the Dot Com (2000) and then mortgage finance (2008) bubbles, and the election of President Trump (2016). Sharing his personal thoughts and opinions each day from 1999 in the globally successful Daily Reckoning and then his Diary of a Rogue Economist, Bonner now makes his views and ideas available alongside analysis from a small hand-picked team of specialists through Bonner Private Research.

See full archive of Bill Bonner articles

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