@conggeshuoche: Follow me to make driving easier! #drivinglesson #drivingadvice #funny

聪哥说车
聪哥说车
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Region: US
Saturday 18 May 2024 01:09:15 GMT
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sohigh343
LOW :
apply braks first, press the accelerator until rpm reach 3500 and release brake??? but i already released it to press the accelerator...
2024-05-20 08:36:16
1
alldrip956
alldrip956 :
Bro almost fell into the ditch
2024-05-18 21:51:03
8
shiro_uchizumi
Shiro Uchizumi :
ok this is acc useful
2024-05-18 01:12:22
5
50_shades_of_tray
Tray :
$3,000 for a wrecker?
2024-05-19 15:02:28
2
emi123456789ab
Emi :
but does it also works with the steering wheels on the other side?
2024-05-19 09:02:21
1
mawura4
Warda.Anisya :
😍😍
2024-05-23 09:36:12
0
dykq6du8jkii
ابو طه الحاج345 :
😳😳😳
2024-05-19 20:02:36
0
user7w7tseoeud
thwbiggay :
rip to his car
2024-05-18 01:22:34
3
bm.mx
Mx :
brother Cong ... $3000 for a tow truck! ?
2024-05-20 21:52:29
1
rohitabbi8
Rohit Abbi :
U are a legend … don’t waste your energy making videos on tiktok 😂😂
2024-05-18 02:29:36
1
alvtowing247
A  L  V  TOWING :
😂😂
2024-05-19 09:28:06
0
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Trump, the Dollar and China: What to watch for in 2025 Trump wants to boost exports, bring back American jobs from overseas and reduce the trade deficit. To achieve this he needs a weaker dollar. Trump also wants a strong dollar and will not brook any challenges to its near monopoly of international payments. Can he possibly have both?    Trump’s Problem No.1: His announced tariffs will most likely boost the dollar as a result of increased uncertainty globally. Even if he slaps large tariffs on imports, the increase in the dollar’s value will eliminate the downward pressures on imports and the US trade deficit. Trump’s Problem No.2: His announced large tax cuts for the rich will boost the influx of foreign capital into the US, further boosting the dollar and the gap between domestic savings & investment, which is the root cause of the US trade deficit. Trump’s Problem No. 3: The near monopoly of the US dollar over international transactions is what ensures the paradox that, whenever things go bad in the US economy, the dollar rises. If Trump were serious about the US trade deficit, and his stated objective of wanting to push the dollar down to make US exports more attractive, he should want to end the dollar’s global dominance. But that would spell the end of the United States as a global hegemon – something Trump does not want to see happen on his watch. Perhaps what might work for Trump would be something similar to what Ronald Reagan did to Japan in the so-called 1985 Plaza Accords: he gave them the ultimatumn “appreciate your currency massively or face massive tariffs on your exports”. Can Trump do the same to China? China is no Japan – it will not roll over that easily. Talking of China, Beijing also faces a great dilemma in 2025 and beyond: · To stay put and play for time until the US internal contradictions play out? · Or to turn the BRICS into a Bretton-Woods-like system, with the yuan at its heart? Beijing has not made up its mind. In the next year, or years, we shall know the answers. Till then, be well. #yanisvaroufakis #usa🇺🇸 #chinaa #dollor #trump2024 #economics
Trump, the Dollar and China: What to watch for in 2025 Trump wants to boost exports, bring back American jobs from overseas and reduce the trade deficit. To achieve this he needs a weaker dollar. Trump also wants a strong dollar and will not brook any challenges to its near monopoly of international payments. Can he possibly have both? Trump’s Problem No.1: His announced tariffs will most likely boost the dollar as a result of increased uncertainty globally. Even if he slaps large tariffs on imports, the increase in the dollar’s value will eliminate the downward pressures on imports and the US trade deficit. Trump’s Problem No.2: His announced large tax cuts for the rich will boost the influx of foreign capital into the US, further boosting the dollar and the gap between domestic savings & investment, which is the root cause of the US trade deficit. Trump’s Problem No. 3: The near monopoly of the US dollar over international transactions is what ensures the paradox that, whenever things go bad in the US economy, the dollar rises. If Trump were serious about the US trade deficit, and his stated objective of wanting to push the dollar down to make US exports more attractive, he should want to end the dollar’s global dominance. But that would spell the end of the United States as a global hegemon – something Trump does not want to see happen on his watch. Perhaps what might work for Trump would be something similar to what Ronald Reagan did to Japan in the so-called 1985 Plaza Accords: he gave them the ultimatumn “appreciate your currency massively or face massive tariffs on your exports”. Can Trump do the same to China? China is no Japan – it will not roll over that easily. Talking of China, Beijing also faces a great dilemma in 2025 and beyond: · To stay put and play for time until the US internal contradictions play out? · Or to turn the BRICS into a Bretton-Woods-like system, with the yuan at its heart? Beijing has not made up its mind. In the next year, or years, we shall know the answers. Till then, be well. #yanisvaroufakis #usa🇺🇸 #chinaa #dollor #trump2024 #economics

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