FURIOUS U.S. Farmers Under ATTACK As $12 Billion Chinese Export Market Crashes

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👉 The American soybean harvest should be a season of relief and reward — but this year, the fields are full, and the buyers are gone. Under President Donald Trump’s aggressive tariff policies, China — once the largest buyer of U.S. soybeans — has walked away completely. In 2024, soybeans were America’s second-largest export, worth nearly $25 billion, with China accounting for more than half. But now? Zero sales. China has turned to Argentina, buying 7 million metric tons of soybeans — about a quarter of Argentina’s crop — just as the U.S. harvest began.

And here’s the twist: while China cut a major deal with Buenos Aires, Trump met with Argentine President Javier Milei at the U.N., offering “full support” for his political future. Within 24 hours, Washington announced a $20 billion bailout for Argentina — the same country that just undercut U.S. farmers on the world market.

American soybean growers are furious. Farm bankruptcies are at a five-year high, rural incomes are collapsing, and U.S. agricultural exports have plunged under the weight of tariffs and retaliatory trade barriers. Yet Trump’s administration appears more focused on propping up a foreign ally than fixing the damage at home.

Meanwhile, nations like Brazil and Argentina are thriving, filling the global demand for soy, beef, pork, and cotton that once belonged to the United States. The U.S. Department of Agriculture now projects a widening agricultural trade deficit — the first in decades — while avoiding public discussion of how tariffs have gutted exports.

So what does all this mean for America’s farmers — and for the “America First” trade agenda? Has Trump’s strategy backfired, turning a promise of economic strength into a crisis of dependency and foreign influence?

In this video, we break down:
- How Trump’s tariffs shut U.S. farmers out of the Chinese market
- Why Argentina’s bailout raises serious political and economic questions
- The growing divide between rural loyalty and economic reality
- What the future holds for America’s farm economy and global trade influence

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