The promise hit like a lightning strike.
Donald Trump says every eligible American could get a $2,000 โdividendโ funded by tariffs on foreign imports.
Supporters call it genius. Critics warn itโs economic Russian roulette.
No one really knows whoโs rightโor how the money would actually be delivered.
Trumpโs proposal to fund a nationwide dividend through tariffs taps directly into anger over globalization and economic inequality.
By vowing at least $2,000 per person, excluding high-income earners, he frames the plan as a direct payback to โforgottenโ Americans and a way to make foreign producers foot the bill.
To many, it sounds like a simple, almost poetic reversal of decades of offshoring and trade deficits.
But behind the emotional punch, the mechanics are murky.
Tariffs are paid first by importers and often passed on to consumers through higher prices, effectively becoming a hidden tax.
Whether the revenue could reliably cover such massive paymentsโand how theyโd be distributed, via tax rebates, checks, or creditsโremains unanswered.
The plan isnโt just a policy idea; itโs a political test of whether voters are driven more by economic frustration and hope than by hard math and long-term risk.

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