During a brief Q&A with reporters yesterday, Donald Trump fielded a question about trade talks with China, which the president responded to in a familiar way:
“China would love to make a deal with us. We had a deal, and they broke the deal. I think, if they had to do again, they wouldn’t have done what they did. We’re taking in billions of dollars in tariffs. China is subsidizing products. So the United States taxpayer is paying for very little of it.”
Earlier this week, Trump made a very similar argument during a press conference in Tokyo, while standing alongside Japanese Prime Minister Abe Shinzo.
“You know, foolishly, some people said that the American taxpayer is paying the tariffs of China. No, no, no — it’s not that way. They’re paying a small percentage, but our country is taking in billions and billions of dollars…. I don’t believe that China can continue to pay these, really, hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs. I don’t believe they can do that.”
At this point, we could talk about the simple fact that Trump has reality backwards. We could also talk about the latest Monmouth University poll that suggested the American public has a better grasp of the basic details than their president.
We could even have a chat about Trump’s willful ignorance and his decision to deliberately ignore reality, even when his own White House team tries to educate the president about his own agenda.
But as important as these angles are, I’m principally concerned with the practical effects of Trump’s ongoing and persistent confusion.









