- United States
- Ind.
- Letter
Dear Senator,
I am writing to urge you to take immediate action to de-escalate the current trade war trajectory before long-term damage to U.S. economic leadership becomes irreversible.
Global markets are reorganizing in real time. Reports of a 40-nation trade bloc forming under the leadership of Mark Carney signal a structural shift in global trade alignment. Whether formalized quickly or gradually, such coalitions reduce reliance on the United States as a central trading partner. Once supply chains, payment systems, and regulatory harmonization are re-anchored elsewhere, those relationships will not easily revert.
Trade friction may be politically expedient, but sustained tariff escalation and retaliatory cycles function as long-term industrial policy for our competitors. Manufacturing investment, commodity routing, currency settlements, and digital infrastructure are already adapting around uncertainty. If global partners conclude that U.S. trade policy is volatile or punitive, they will institutionalize alternatives.
This is not about short-term market volatility. It is about structural exclusion from emerging trade architecture. The cost will be measured in lost export access, diminished dollar leverage, weakened strategic alliances, and reduced influence over global standards.
I ask that you:
• Advocate for immediate negotiations aimed at de-escalation and tariff rollback where strategically viable.
• Demand transparent economic impact assessments on current trade measures.
• Support policies that restore predictability and strengthen multilateral trade engagement rather than accelerate fragmentation.
The United States built the post-war global trade framework. Allowing it to be replaced through avoidable escalation would represent a generational strategic failure.
Respectfully,
A concerned tax payer.