導言:本博主藉助於AI,推出一系列中英對照的中式【脫口秀】帖子,旨在通過新穎有趣的方式,激發年輕一代華人對時政的關注與思考。每段【脫口秀】後都附有原文,方便ABC對照閱讀。
英美主流媒體提供了豐富的優質時政內容,既有時效性,又有深度。為了讓更多年輕華人參與到政治討論中,我們可以嘗試多種方式,各顯神通。如果你對這些內容產生共鳴,歡迎轉發支持!
川普又開始對中國發飆了,這回是2025年2月27日,兄弟們,記好了,這一天估計得載入“中美互掐史冊”。老唐這傢伙,嘴上老嚷着關稅關稅,好像沒這玩意兒他就活不下去了。但你仔細瞅瞅他上台後干的那些事,嘿,關稅只是個開胃菜,他真正想玩的是把中美經濟關係徹底掰扯開,弄得跟分手撕逼似的,誰也別想好過。
這不,川普政府已經放話要限制中美投資,連技術賣給中國都得掂量掂量,生怕國家安全被“偷了”。還加了個10%的關稅,美其名曰“開篇第一炮”。我尋思這“第一炮”聽着咋那麼像過年放的二踢腳呢?噼里啪啦一頓響,最後啥也沒炸着。耶魯那個叫薩姆·薩克斯的專家說了,老唐上周五搞的那份投資備忘錄,簡直就是“中美商業離婚”的作戰計劃書。聽着挺唬人,但薩克斯也說了,這可能是老唐跟習近平討價還價的籌碼——談崩了就真脫鈎,談成了就繼續做生意,反正老唐這人吧,腦子裡永遠是筆買賣。
說到買賣,老唐對習近平還挺有好感,畢竟2020年那份協議沒兌現,他還惦記着跟習大爺做點交易。可他手下那幫鷹派顧問就不幹了,一個個跟打了雞血似的,非要把中國摁死。結果呢?一邊是老唐喊着“歡迎中國車企來美國建廠,雇美國工人就行”,另一邊是他的人忙着給日本收購美國鋼企潑冷水,還順手掐着TikTok的脖子。你說這幫人到底是要幹啥?合着老唐是想左手拉投資,右手扇中國耳光,玩得跟川劇變臉似的。
上回當總統,他還放了中興一馬,咋回事呢?因為習近平幫他牽線搭橋見了金正恩。這回呢,他又開始加關稅,說中國沒管住毒品流入美國。我尋思,中國要是真能管住美國街頭的毒販,那得派多少居委會大媽過去啊?中國也不是吃素的,反手就對美國貨加稅,還掐了點關鍵礦產出口,順便給谷歌整了個反壟斷調查。這劇情,簡直比國產劇還狗血。
老唐第一天上任就簽了個貿易備忘錄,要研究怎麼收拾中國,連WTO之前的“永久正常貿易關係”都想給廢了。上周五,美國貿易代表還說要搞個案子,保護美國造船業不被中國搶飯碗。芯片出口?漏洞還得再堵嚴實點。商務部那幫老員工也被他開了幾個,換上新人盯着中國科技企業使勁捏。投資方面,他弄了個總統備忘錄,搞得跟喊口號似的,說是要攔住中國買美國關鍵資產,還要把審查權限擴大到“從零開始”的項目。聽着挺狠,但也就是嚇唬嚇唬,實際幹起來還得看他心情。
這備忘錄里還說,美國歡迎盟友投資,但對中國就得嚴防死守,怕技術被偷走,怕中國拿錢砸美國農業、礦產啥的。批評的人說,這投資流動不光養肥了中國政府,連軍隊都搭上了順風車。支持老唐的“繁榮美國聯盟”直接拍手叫好,說這是“歷史性突破”,還指望國會把華爾街那幫“沒良心”的投資給禁了。可專家說了,這玩意兒真要落地,影響未必有那麼大,沒準還得吃官司。約翰霍普金斯的陳玲教授就挺淡定,說中國對美投資早就不咋樣了,這備忘錄也就是個擺設。
總結一句,老唐這回是想玩大的,但能不能玩成,還得看他跟習近平的這場“交易牌”誰先眨眼。咱就搬個小板凳,嗑着瓜子等着看戲吧。
So, Trump’s back at it, kicking off a fresh round of China-bashing as of February 27, 2025—mark your calendars, folks, this might just go down in the "Sino-US Smackdown Chronicles." Old Donnie’s got a boner for tariffs, like he can’t live without slapping a few extra bucks on imports. But if you squint at what he’s been up to since taking office, tariffs are just the appetizer. The dude’s plotting a full-on economic breakup with China, like some messy divorce where both sides end up broke and bitter.
Check this out: the Trump crew’s already talking about tightening the screws on investment flows between the US and China, plus throwing more roadblocks on tech sales—all under the sacred banner of "national security." Oh, and he’s slapped a 10% tariff on Chinese imports, calling it “the opening salvo.” Opening salvo? Sounds more like those firecrackers you set off at New Year’s—lots of noise, but nothing really blows up. Yale’s Sam Sachs, some big-shot researcher, says that investment memo Trump dropped last Friday reads like a battle cry to “finish the unfinished business of cutting China loose commercially.” Sounds badass, but Sachs reckons it might just be a bargaining chip for Trump to haggle with Xi Jinping. If the talks tank (which, let’s be real, is the most likely outcome), this could be the blueprint for a full-on decoupling.
Thing is, how far this goes depends on Trump himself. The guy’s got a soft spot for striking deals with Xi, partly because China didn’t deliver on that 2020 agreement they signed. Some ex-advisors say Trump’s less hawkish than his war-drum-banging team—he’s more about the art of the deal than torching bridges. He might keep the economic ties alive if he thinks he can squeeze out something juicy for the US. Case in point: he’s all for foreign cash pouring into America, even saying during the campaign, “Hey, Chinese carmakers, come build plants in Michigan, Ohio, South Carolina—hire American workers, and we’re golden.” Meanwhile, his party’s freaking out about Japan snapping up US Steel or anyone trying to save TikTok. What’s the game plan here? One hand’s waving in investments, the other’s smacking China upside the head—dude’s playing whack-a-mole with a smirk.
Last time he was prez, he let ZTE off the hook after Xi played matchmaker for that Kim Jong Un meet-up. This time, he’s cranking up tariffs again, whining that China’s not doing enough to stop drugs flooding the US. Bro, if China could rein in American street dealers, they’d need to ship over a whole army of neighborhood aunties. China’s not taking it lying down either—slapped tariffs on US goods, choked off some key mineral exports, and even kicked off an antitrust probe into Google. This drama’s juicier than a soap opera.
Day one in office, Trump signs a trade memo telling his lackeys to dig into more ways to screw China—like maybe yanking that pre-WTO permanent normal trade status. Last Friday, the US Trade Rep’s office said they’re pushing a case to shield American shipbuilding from Chinese competition. Chips? Gotta patch up those export loopholes. The Commerce Department’s getting a facelift too—fired some old-timers, including export control guy Matthew Borman, and brought in new blood like Landon Hyde, who’s all about choking out Chinese tech firms. On the investment front, Trump’s memo is more bark than bite for now—lots of tough talk about blocking Chinese grabs at “critical” US assets, but it’s not law yet.
The memo’s got this grand vibe: welcoming allied cash with a fast pass while eyeballing Chinese moves like a hawk, scared they’ll snatch up tech, IP, or muscle into farming and shipping. Critics say this cash flow’s been juicing up China’s government and military, funding shady stuff that screws the US. The pro-protectionism gang at “Prosperous America” is cheering, calling it a “historic breakthrough” and begging Congress to kneecap Wall Street’s “reckless” bets on Chinese firms. But cooler heads, like Johns Hopkins prof Chen Ling, shrug it off—Chinese investment in the US has been tanking since 2017, so this memo’s more noise than knockout punch. Another ex-Treasury guy, Jim Circlet, says some of these ideas—like vetting greenfield projects—might get laughed out of court.
Bottom line? Trump’s swinging big, but whether he lands the punch depends on who blinks first in this Xi-Trump staredown. Grab some popcorn, folks—this show’s just heating up.