Trump is back in action. On the 18th early morning, he directly stated that tariffs will be imposed on NATO countries opposing the Greenland issue. How clear is this signal? Tariffs are his most convenient and least restrictive tool, and he doesn't distinguish between enemies and friends at all.



But even more interesting than the tariff policy itself is the reaction from the U.S. Supreme Court—one word: silence. The ruling date keeps being postponed, and this kind of stalling itself hints at hidden motives. The most reasonable explanation is that the Supreme Court may be intentionally giving the President some space, not wanting to limit the President's powers. In other words, Trump's influence within the judicial system is indeed there.

Why? Because if the Supreme Court directly rules that tariffs are illegal, it would cause too much commotion. First, it would disrupt global trade expectations; second, it would force Trump to adopt even more outrageous tactics, pushing uncertainty to the maximum, which the market can't handle.

The real issue is targeting allies. This touches on the bottom line that both the internal U.S. system and the entire alliance network care about. So the most likely scenario now is a compromise: retain the existing tariffs, but any future increases must go through Congress. This makes Trump's recent provocations against NATO less tenable, and both parties can find a way to step down.

Or simply "delay"—no ruling, no denial, pushing the trouble to after the mid-term elections. In the short term, it's not about the outcome but the rhythm. If there's still no movement by next Tuesday, the market will expect long-term delays.
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0xLostKeyvip
· 13h ago
The Supreme Court's silence this time is truly remarkable, it's basically making room for Trump. The judicial system has to consider politics too; this game isn't that simple. Even Greenland is on the radar, and slapping tariffs on allies is even more outrageous. Once the delaying tactic is used, the market is always that dog. If there's no news by next Tuesday, I'll go all-in on a short.
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PanicSeller69vip
· 13h ago
The Supreme Court's silence this time basically means they are protecting Trump's power tools. The talk about judicial independence is just for show. What do our allies think about the Greenland tariffs? We agreed on NATO, but it seems like we're about to kill each other. So, now it all depends on whether the court moves next Tuesday. If it drags on, we should be prepared for a long period of volatility. Tariffs are indeed a powerful weapon in Trump's hands, the kind that makes it hard to distinguish friends from enemies. However, Congress will probably get involved too. A compromise solution is the most reasonable, allowing everyone to step down gracefully.
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RugDocDetectivevip
· 13h ago
The Supreme Court's "silence" is really just protecting Trump; judicial independence here has become a facade.
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GasBankruptervip
· 13h ago
Silence itself is the answer. The Supreme Court's recent move has directly spoiled Trump.
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ApeDegenvip
· 14h ago
Silence is an attitude, and the Supreme Court's move this time is brilliant. This game is much more complicated than tariffs themselves; true players understand. See the outcome next Tuesday. Doing nothing is just paving the way for Trump. The Greenland affair, to put it plainly, is about testing the bottom line of allies. Tariffs have long become a political tool, and the judicial system is well aware of this. It's most comfortable to drag things out before the midterm elections; no one wants to cause a big stir. Allies are really feeling uncomfortable now, threatened by their own big brother. The Supreme Court's delaying tactics indeed carry deep meaning; it's not truly incompetence. The most likely compromise plan, probably, both parties will have to give each other a step down.
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SatoshiLeftOnReadvip
· 14h ago
The Supreme Court's move is truly impeccable; silence is indeed an attitude. --- This Greenland matter, imposing tariffs on allies—how ruthless can it get? --- Playing the delaying tactic so skillfully, how can the market not panic? --- The compromise plan sounds reasonable, but who would believe it, right? --- Claiming that the judicial system has influence is just ridiculous. --- If there's no action next Tuesday, we'll see clearly—long-term delays. --- Taking action against allies is truly crossing the line, I agree with that. --- Trump only has this one move: tariffs cure all diseases, right? --- The Supreme Court's silence is actually a silent form of support. --- Can Congress agree? Both parties need to have some brains.
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