While President Trump gears up to tout American economic strength in Tuesday's State of the Union address, the same swamp creatures who'll applaud his words are busy trying to destroy the tax policies that actually make American manufacturing possible.
The establishment's favorite punching bag? So-called 'tax loopholes' – a loaded term designed to make you think successful businesses are somehow cheating the system. But here's what they don't want you to know: these aren't loopholes at all. They're carefully crafted incentives that keep American factories competitive against countries like China that subsidize their industries with slave labor.
Think about it, Patriots. When a company gets a tax break for building a new plant in Ohio instead of moving operations to Mexico, that's not corruption – that's smart policy. When manufacturers get incentives to invest in American workers and equipment, that's exactly what we want.
The Real Story They Won't Tell You
These 'loopholes' don't just help big corporations. They create jobs for everyday Americans, keep communities alive, and ensure we're not completely dependent on hostile foreign nations for critical goods. Remember the supply chain disasters under Biden? That's what happens when we don't have domestic manufacturing capacity.
"What critics dismiss as 'loopholes' often serve as the incentives that help ordinary Americans," as one analysis noted, exposing how the mainstream narrative completely misses the point.
The America First agenda recognizes this reality. While globalists want to eliminate these incentives in the name of 'tax fairness,' President Trump understands that keeping businesses in America requires us to compete with countries that play by completely different rules.
Every time some RINO or Democrat rails against 'corporate tax loopholes,' ask yourself: would you rather have those jobs in Michigan or in Communist China? Would you rather have that factory in Texas or in Mexico?
The choice is clear. Real economic nationalism means using every tool at our disposal to keep American manufacturing strong. These aren't loopholes – they're lifelines for American workers and communities.
