“The Hitler tariffs, announced on Friday, February 10, 1933, stunned observers. “The dimension of the tariff increases have in fact exceeded all expectations,” the Vossische Zeitung wrote disapprovingly, proclaiming the moment a “fork in the road” for the German economy. It appeared that Europe’s largest and most industrialized nation would suddenly be returning “to the furrow and the plow.” The New York Times saw this for what it was: “a trade war” against its European neighbors.
@georgetakei I'm drinking a lovely cup of Tetley's #tea. Very good tea. Very cheap tea from the #UK. Why not American Freedom tea? Because freedom tea tastes like whore cooch. It takes several hundred years of cultivation to produce a good tea and a thriving tea estate. And no matter how patriotic you are...the tea is not going to be better faster because of "america first". We can't get EVERYTHING domestically. It's impossible. #economy

@praetor LMAO British colonialism produced Tetley's tea.

You just prefer your flavor of colonialism. At least an Indian corporation eventually bought that particular colonial institution.

How about trying to migrate to transnational business which doesn't begin with colonialism?

Like perhaps an Indian tea producer which was founded by an Indian, who sells the kind of tea I drink, and not that colonialist originated stuff?

https://www.vahdam.com/

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@femme_mal And honestly...they ALL started from Colonialism. Every last estate has started that way.
@praetor @femme_mal Dilmah tea https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dilmah is pretty available in US and quite good and a Sri Lanka company dedicated to decolonialized tea industry. Ceylon tea is the best!
Dilmah - Wikipedia