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Ares
24th July 2016, 09:10 AM
Compelling Mexico to Pay for the Wall

Introduction: The provision of the Patriot Act, Section 326 - the "know your customer" provision, compelling financial institutions to demand identity documents before opening accounts or conducting financial transactions is a fundamental element of the outline below. That section authorized the executive branch to issue detailed regulations on the subject, found at 31 CFR 130.120-121. It's an easy decision for Mexico: make a one-time payment of $5-10 billion to ensure that $24 billion continues to flow into their country year after year. There are several ways to compel Mexico to pay for the wall including the following:

On day 1 promulgate a "proposed rule" (regulation) amending 31 CFR 130.121 to redefine applicable financial institutions to include money transfer companies like Western Union, and redefine "account" to include wire transfers. Also include in the proposed rule a requirement that no alien may wire money outside of the United States unless the alien first provides a document establishing his lawful presence in the United States.
On day 2 Mexico will immediately protest. They receive approximately $24 billion a year in remittances from Mexican nationals working in the United States. The majority of that amount comes from illegal aliens. It serves as de facto welfare for poor families in Mexico. There is no significant social safety net provided by the state in Mexico.
On day 3 tell Mexico that if the Mexican government will contribute the funds needed to the United States to pay for the wall, the Trump Administration will not promulgate the final rule, and the regulation will not go into effect.
Trade tariffs, or enforcement of existing trade rules: There is no doubt that Mexico is engaging in unfair subsidy behavior that has eliminated thousands of U.S. jobs, and which we are obligated to respond to; the impact of any tariffs on the price imports will be more than offset by the economic and income gains of increased production in the United States, in addition to revenue from any tariffs themselves. Mexico needs access to our markets much more than the reverse, so we have all the leverage and will win the negotiation. By definition, if you have a large trade deficit with a nation, it means they are selling far more to you than the reverse - thus they, not you, stand to lose from enforcing trade rules through tariffs (as has been done to save many U.S. industries in the past).
Cancelling visas: Immigration is a privilege, not a right. Mexico is totally dependent on the United States as a release valve for its own poverty - our approvals of hundreds of thousands of visas to their nationals every year is one of our greatest leverage points. We also have leverage through business and tourist visas for important people in the Mexican economy. Keep in mind, the United States has already taken in 4X more migrants than any other country on planet earth, producing lower wages and higher unemployment for our own citizens and recent migrants.
Visa fees: Even a small increase in visa fees would pay for the wall. This includes fees on border crossing cards, of which more than 1 million are issued a year. The border-crossing card is also one of the greatest sources of illegal immigration into the United States, via overstays. Mexico is also the single largest recipient of U.S. green cards, which confer a path to U.S. citizenship. Again, we have the leverage so Mexico will back down.

Conclusion: Mexico has taken advantage of us in another way as well: gangs, drug traffickers and cartels have freely exploited our open borders and committed vast numbers of crimes inside the United States. The United States has borne the extraordinary daily cost of this criminal activity, including the cost of trials and incarcerations. Not to mention the even greater human cost. We have the moral high ground here, and all the leverage. It is time we use it in order to Make America Great Again.

https://www.donaldjtrump.com/positions/pay-for-the-wall

EE_
24th July 2016, 09:24 AM
Compelling Mexico to Pay for the Wall

There are several ways to compel Mexico to pay for the wall including the following:

On day 1 promulgate a "proposed rule" (regulation) amending 31 CFR 130.121 to redefine applicable financial institutions to include money transfer companies like Western Union, and redefine "account" to include wire transfers. Also include in the proposed rule a requirement that no alien may wire money outside of the United States unless the alien first provides a document establishing his lawful presence in the United States.
On day 2 Mexico will immediately protest. They receive approximately $24 billion a year in remittances from Mexican nationals working in the United States. The majority of that amount comes from illegal aliens. It serves as de facto welfare for poor families in Mexico. There is no significant social safety net provided by the state in Mexico.
On day 3 tell Mexico that if the Mexican government will contribute the funds needed to the United States to pay for the wall, the Trump Administration will not promulgate the final rule, and the regulation will not go into effect.


On day 4, Mexico begins seizing all homes American's own in Mexico.
On day 5, the Narco state of Mexico begins killing all Americans living/visiting Mexico
On day 6, ?

Ares
24th July 2016, 09:31 AM
On day 4, Mexico begins seizing all homes American's own in Mexico.
On day 5, the Narco state of Mexico begins killing all Americans living/visiting Mexico
On day 6, ?

That is an act of war, and they will lose before it even starts. Fire bomb and defoliate the cocaine fields and the narco state losses its main source of income.

EE_
24th July 2016, 10:08 AM
That is an act of war, and they will lose before it even starts. Fire bomb and defoliate the cocaine fields and the narco state losses its main source of income.

Sure, but in the mean time...

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_XpO5QqiHYGs/SynA2Er38kI/AAAAAAAAA3g/O0G_KoUFM9Y/s400/8_Heads_in_a_Duffel_Bag-486.jpg

Horn
24th July 2016, 10:34 AM
Day 4 - those friends of aliens with proper docs receive mullah type usury powers to wire transfer money on their behalf.

an den Bitcoin saves their day.

Holding Mexico hostage is about as stupid a plan, as kidnapping a bum for money.

Glass
24th July 2016, 04:49 PM
Day 4 - those friends of aliens with proper docs receive mullah type usury powers to wire transfer money on their behalf.

an den Bitcoin saves their day.

Holding Mexico hostage is about as stupid a plan, as kidnapping a bum for money.

So you're saying it's Bitcoin positive then?

cheka.
24th July 2016, 06:38 PM
sounds like a return to the AMERICAN system. tariffs/duties pay for the federal government -- NOT taxes on US workers' wages

the duals flipped this around after the coup in 1913....and accompanied the agenda with decades of free trade propaganda through all of their injection points -- media, skoolz, etc

Horn
24th July 2016, 10:21 PM
Well anything other than the ultimate in tariff would rely on the continued support of illegal alien income as a position, So yes, this plan is null and void from the outset.

Thus the plan should immediately focus on a tariff, which would set off a chain of events globally. The U.S. is in no position to implement tariffs currently, it should require at least a full 2 terms or 8 years of preparation to support itself before even considering them. Anything less would be a blunderbuss to its economy, or double that amount of time needed to recover.

If Trump were able to level a reduced to no income tax into support from tariff Only in any 8 or even 30 year term it would be genius.

My guess is U.S. citizens will be left with both forms of taxation once tariff is factored in. Proceeding to implement tariff on any one country at a time is a fools errand, it would need to be globally set.

Trump is basically dipshiting it, (if you ask me) with his plan to "mark" each import country individually. Unless you fellas will somehow appreciate having checkpoints setup across the entire globe and turning everything into a Colombia or huge groundswelling of blackmarket items.

Everything about tariffs empowers a jew global trader from tracking of imports to implementation, Nobody other than global corps. would be able to compete anymore.

Not to mention how seeking others to pay for Your will (to build a wall) is an inherently jewish trait to begin with, which Trump assumes quite leisurely... why you ask? Well he is part and parcel to the cause, a jew by will is a jew none the less to me.

Alls that's missing is his beanie. "Let's make America Great again by having someone else pickup the check!"

cheka.
24th July 2016, 11:09 PM
Well anything other than the ultimate in tariff would rely on the continued support of illegal alien income as a position, So yes, this plan is null and void from the outset.

Thus the plan should immediately focus on a tariff, which would set off a chain of events globally. The U.S. is in no position to implement tariffs currently, it should require at least a full 2 terms or 8 years of preparation to support itself before even considering them. Anything less would be a blunderbuss to its economy, or double that amount of time needed to recover.

If Trump were able to level a reduced to no income tax into support from tariff Only in any 8 or even 30 year term it would be genius.

My guess is U.S. citizens will be left with both forms of taxation once tariff is factored in. Proceeding to implement tariff on any one country at a time is a fools errand, it would need to be globally set.

Trump is basically dipshiting it, (if you ask me) with his plan to "mark" each import country individually. Unless you fellas will somehow appreciate having checkpoints setup across the entire globe and turning everything into a Colombia or huge groundswelling of blackmarket items.

Everything about tariffs empowers a jew global trader from tracking of imports to implementation, Nobody other than global corps. would be able to compete anymore.

Not to mention how seeking others to pay for Your will (to build a wall) is an inherently jewish trait to begin with, which Trump assumes quite leisurely... why you ask? Well he is part and parcel to the cause, a jew by will is a jew none the less to me.

Alls that's missing is his beanie. "Let's make America Great again by having someone else pickup the check!"

the tariff issue is THE reason nyc/dc hates trump. before him, it was not even allowed to be discussed - like 9/11 truth. this fact alone ought to lead one to question what they've been fed

the globalist corps will lose the financial incentive to produce overseas to sell in US. that's the key change

Horn
24th July 2016, 11:41 PM
the tariff issue is THE reason nyc/dc hates trump. before him, it was not even allowed to be discussed - like 9/11 truth. this fact alone ought to lead one to question what they've been fed

the globalist corps will lose the financial incentive to produce overseas to sell in US. that's the key change

If it were possible to pay any workforce in the U.S. $5 a day I might be inclined to agree.

No, VAT and other import added tax is well liked, promoted, discussed and pursued along with income and other forms of tax by a fixed a rigged global market. most any action these days on wall street is well away from the real street anyways. The market is soft as rotten eggs.

A U.S. Tariff will only work to seal deals away from any new competition entering the global trade marketplace at this point, or any points foreseeable. Domestically U.S. would be an inflationary shitstorm for at least a decade.

The only thing Trump will achieve is covering for past transgressions by globalists, I think they'd luv him for it. The "presumed" fault will be squarely on his shoulders with such a drastic or rapid "wall for Mexico hostage schemes"

No New Taxes, Thank you

U.S. Citizens will be the ones paying them and I have no wish to see D.C. balloon into anything more than it already is.

monty
24th July 2016, 11:41 PM
the tariff issue is THE reason nyc/dc hates trump. before him, it was not even allowed to be discussed - like 9/11 truth. this fact alone ought to lead one to question what they've been fed the globalist corps will lose the financial incentive to produce overseas to sell in US. that's the key change

The stumbling block I see with implementing a tariff is we have no manufacturing community, our factories are in a state of antiquity and disrepair, we don't have a trained workforce. It will take time to become productive like we once were. Consequently we may have to purchase higher priced goods from foreigners while we are getting back online. But I support the idea.

Sent from my iPhone using Forum Runner

Horn
25th July 2016, 12:11 AM
Carter had a better idea for U.S. with letting a barrel of oil go through the roof, or pissing whoever off that he did.

That would force domestic production, a U.S. tax on oil would shake things up,

but then again Trump would be the new Jimmy Carter... No "winning" there.

Neuro
25th July 2016, 04:01 AM
If it were possible to pay any workforce in the U.S. $5 a day I might be inclined to agree.

No, VAT and other import added tax is well liked, promoted, discussed and pursued along with income and other forms of tax by a fixed a rigged global market. most any action these days on wall street is well away from the real street anyways. The market is soft as rotten eggs.

A U.S. Tariff will only work to seal deals away from any new competition entering the global trade marketplace at this point, or any points foreseeable. Domestically U.S. would be an inflationary shitstorm for at least a decade.

The only thing Trump will achieve is covering for past transgressions by globalists, I think they'd luv him for it. The "presumed" fault will be squarely on his shoulders with such a drastic or rapid "wall for Mexico hostage schemes"

No New Taxes, Thank you

U.S. Citizens will be the ones paying them and I have no wish to see D.C. balloon into anything more than it already is.

There used to be a time when tariffs were applied, things used to be more expensive, but of better quality, people tried to maintain and keep in shape what they had, and didn't go and shop for more shit every weekend, instead they went fishing. Before buying they gave it some thought, made sure they actually needed the product, and that the product would continue to function. Often times people just made it themselves (knitting, sewing, carpentry) I actually believe people were happier then. Or did I just dream that?

Horn
25th July 2016, 10:24 AM
the best tax is a flat sales tax on all imports, same as tariff basically.

what nation would want any imposed before some other were completely removed must be a nightmare.

Trump would not dig it, cause half the nation would quit purchasing imports, the other half become a black market importer and he would not have dough for any of his grandurous plans.