


🚨🇺🇸🇨🇭TRUMP'S DAVOS TAKEAWAYS: FIVE THINGS THAT ACTUALLY MATTERED 1. Greenland Without Guns: Trump finally ruled out military force for Greenland: "I don't want to use force. I won't use force." After weeks of refusing to rule out invasion, this was the headline moment that calmed markets. But here's the thing: by threatening force for weeks, then publicly backing down, Trump made himself look reasonable while still getting what he wanted. Classic negotiation theater. 2. Mystery Framework Deal: Hours later, Trump announced a "framework" deal with NATO on Greenland. When asked if he still needs ownership, he deflected: "It's the ultimate long-term deal." Put simply: nobody knows what this actually means yet. Trump's betting that vague victory announcements buy him time to work out details later. The White House claims they're "achieving all strategic goals" without specifying what those are. 3. Tariff Threats Canceled: The 10% tariffs on European allies scheduled for February 1st are off the table. Markets loved this news, with the Dow surging 600 points. This shows Trump's tariff threats work better as leverage than actual policy. He got Europe's attention, forced negotiations, then pulled back before economic damage. 4. Europe Getting Roasted🔥: Trump went full savage on European allies: "Certain places in Europe are not even recognizable anymore" and called them out for "destroying themselves" through energy policies. This was strategic humiliation designed to weaken their negotiating position while appealing to his base. 5. Tariffs as Trump's Hammer: He made clear tariffs are his go-to weapon: "Without tariffs, I wouldn't have been able to get it done." Every negotiation starts with the threat of economic pain. Trump's essentially turned trade policy into economic brinkmanship: nice economy you've got there, shame if something happened to it. Bottom line: Trump showed up, made everyone sweat, then pulled back from the brink while keeping maximum leverage. He's governing like a mob boss with nuclear weapons. Source: Sky, WSJ














