Trump mining deal threatens City of London
UK mining giant Rio Tinto, whose largest non-institutional shareholder is the Royal Family, has missed out on the critical minerals deal struck between the US and Australia this week.
Ambassador Kevin Rudd whom Trump said he did not like at a press conference happens to be a senior adviser at Chatham House, 10 St James Square, London, which is an international affairs think tank.
White House Trade Counselor Peter Navarro’s recent speech at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and President Trump’s rare earth minerals deal with Australia are both strategic moves aimed at dismantling British imperial control.
The video reveals how these actions are part of a broader strategy to challenge globalism and British influence, juxtaposing Trump’s economic policies with historical British tactics of economic control. Susan Kokinda explains the significance of America’s industrial partnership with Australia and the historical context of British imperial dominance, highlighting a coordinated effort to shift power dynamics globally.
This alliance with the US is a great step forward in resurrecting manufacturing in Australia which British imperialist policies have prevented Australia from doing for two centuries.
The big problem for the US is Labor’s renewables death dive which will prevent Australia, ‘the Quarry’, from starting any meaningful manufacturing industries because power is too expensive and in 12 months time be unavailable for heavy industry.