
U.S. Market - The Law of the Land
How long-forgotten 13th and 14th century political conflicts between Italian cities hold a lesson for the rule of law everywhere, and in America today



How long-forgotten 13th and 14th century political conflicts between Italian cities hold a lesson for the rule of law everywhere, and in America today

Tariffs are supposed to set the U.S. economy on a virtuous growth path - Now comes the hard part of convincing America's business to make long-term commitments, to re-industrialize and to allocate the considerable financial resources to do so

Flush from the 1945 U.S. victory in WWII, would a "President Trump" pull up the drawbridge or take Harry Truman's gamble of global markets for democracies?

Credibility is the fact-based mortar of the emotional connection, foundational in trust; in industrial planning, it is a high bar to pass, challenging business leaders and government officials

U.S. markets are vulnerable to tariff upheavals today but in the longer run, it is America's status as sole superpower which is at risk, weighing on the country's future, and its global standing