The Washington Examiner just dropped another establishment hit piece trying to undermine President Trump's historic economic achievements, claiming manufacturing has "struggled" since what Trump rightfully called "Liberation Day" - April 2, 2025, when he imposed game-changing tariffs to protect American workers.
But here's what the corporate media won't tell you, Patriots: this is exactly the kind of short-term thinking that kept America dependent on Chinese slave labor for decades.
When Trump declared that April day would be remembered as "the day American industry was reborn, the day America's destiny was reclaimed, and the day that we began to make America wealthy again," he wasn't promising instant gratification. He was launching a generational shift back to American manufacturing dominance.
The Real Story They Don't Want You to Know
Yes, some sectors experienced initial adjustment periods - that's Economics 101, folks. When you've spent 30 years shipping jobs overseas and suddenly decide to rebuild domestic capacity, there are growing pains. But what's the alternative? Keep enriching the Chinese Communist Party while American factory towns become ghost towns?
"We're not just reshoring jobs, we're reshoring our national security," Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters last month. "Every slight dip in short-term metrics is an investment in long-term American prosperity."
The establishment media conveniently ignores the massive private investment flowing into American manufacturing, the new factories breaking ground from Ohio to Texas, and the supply chains finally becoming independent from hostile foreign powers.
Remember, these are the same "experts" who said Trump's first-term policies would crash the economy. Instead, we got the greatest economic boom in modern history - until COVID and the Biden regime's disastrous policies destroyed it all.
America First Results Take Time
Real economic transformation doesn't happen overnight, and Trump knows it. While China scrambles to find new markets for their cheap goods, American companies are investing billions in domestic production capacity that will power our economy for generations.
The question isn't whether some metrics dipped during the transition - it's whether you want America dependent on foreign adversaries or strong enough to control our own destiny. President Trump made his choice clear on Liberation Day, and history will vindicate him.
Are you willing to endure short-term adjustment for long-term American dominance, or should we go back to the globalist model that sold out American workers for decades?
