Tag: threats

  • How Trump’s tariff threats could impact foreign policy

    How Trump’s tariff threats could impact foreign policy

    President Donald Trump is showing no hesitation in following up on his campaign vow to heavily utilize tariffs during his second term. 

    The president was quick to impose them on Colombia over the weekend when the nation refused to accept flights of deported nationals that had illegally migrated to the U.S., threatening retaliatory tariffs of their own. When the South American country then did an about-face and agreed to take back their citizens, Trump hit pause on the levies.

    President Donald Trump makes a speech via video-conference during the the 55th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 23, 2025. (Halil Sagirkaya/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon told CNBC last week that he views tariffs as “an economic tool,” and depending on how they are used, “They’re an economic weapon.”

    Psychotherapist and author Jonathan Alpert, who has coached numerous business owners and C-level executives on negotiating, says tariffs, or the threat of tariffs, can be a powerful psychological tool in negotiations because they leverage fear and uncertainty.  

    JAMIE DIMON SAYS TARIFFS CAN BE POSITIVE FOR NATIONAL SECURITY, EVEN IF INFLATIONARY: ‘GET OVER IT’

    “By imposing or threatening tariffs, Trump signals strength and an ability to inflict economic difficulty, prompting the other country to reconsider their position,” Alpert told FOX Business. “In Colombia’s case, the quick retreat shows how effective this ‘economic weapon,’ as Jamie Dimon calls it, can be when the stakes are high and the other party feels they have more to lose than gain.”

    However, Alpert says, applying this strategy to larger economies like China or the EU is a different story. 

    He argues those larger countries often have more complex and diversified economies, making them less susceptible to immediate tariff threats. There’s a concern that they might retaliate with countermeasures, which can escalate into prolonged trade wars with wider economic implications. 

    CANADA READY FOR TRUMP TARIFF FIGHT AS COUNTRY’S LEADERS THREATEN RETALIATION: ‘DOLLAR-FOR-DOLLAR’

    “The success of tariffs as a negotiating tool depends on the perceived balance of power and whether both parties have the political will and economic flexibility to endure the consequences,” Alpert said. “In many ways, it’s psychological warfare – and to Trump’s credit, he is masterful at it.”

    He added that ultimately, while tariffs can create short-term victories, they’re not a one-size-fits-all solution. 

    US and China economy and trade

    Trump has threatened to impose steep tariffs on goods from other countries, particularly Chinese imports. (iStock/Photo illustration / iStock)

    Monica Gorman, managing director at Crowell Global Advisors, who served as a trade and supply chain expert in the Biden administration, told FOX Business she doesn’t want to speculate on what the Trump administration will do, but historically, if a country is subject to new tariffs, it typically responds with retaliatory tariffs of its own – as we just saw with Colombia. 

    Similarly, she said, if a group of countries face increased tariffs with one big strategic partner, they generally sustain their trading volume by forming an alliance to trade amongst themselves instead. For example, the EU just recently signed a trade deal with a bloc of countries in South America and updated their agreement with Mexico in anticipation of possible higher U.S. tariffs. 

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    Gorman says tariffs should be approached strategically, pointing to the old adage that “when all you’ve got is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail.” 

    “But both foreign policy and trade policy are complex,” she said, “and we don’t want to use a hammer when we should be using a scalpel…”

    Alpert agrees that risk lies in overusing tariffs can lead to creating long-term resentment or instability in global markets. 

    “For the U.S., the key will be knowing when and where to apply this pressure—and just as importantly, when to back off,” he said, adding, “Trump has had great success in the business world and his ‘Art of the Deal’ strategy seems to be effective thus far.”

  • Colombia’s Gustavo Petro quickly backtracks after Trump threats over deportation flights

    Colombia’s Gustavo Petro quickly backtracks after Trump threats over deportation flights

    Colombian President Gustavo Petro offered his presidential plane to repatriate migrants coming back from the U.S. on Sunday, following stern warnings made by President Donald Trump.

    The move came after Trump hit the Central American country with retaliatory measures in response to Petro’s refusal to accept deportation flights. In a statement translated from Spanish, the Colombian government said that the plane will help facilitate a “dignified return.”

    “The Government of Colombia, under the direction of President Gustavo Petro, has arranged the presidential plane to facilitate the dignified return of the compatriots who were going to arrive in the country today in the morning, coming from deportation flights,” the translated statement read.

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    President Donald Trump issued stark warnings to Colombian President Gustavo Petro over the weekend. (Getty Images)

    “This measure responds to the Government’s commitment to guarantee decent conditions.”

    Fox News Digital’s Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.

  • Ryan Day hired armed security to protect his family following death threats after Michigan loss

    Ryan Day hired armed security to protect his family following death threats after Michigan loss

    In the days following Ryan Day walking off the field in Columbus following Ohio State’s loss to Michigan to end the regular season, his family’s safety was the main priority after they received death threats from a lunatic fringe of Buckeye fans. 

    There was obviously a monster fallout in Columbus after the loss, with fans calling for Ryan Day to be fired after Ohio State lost its fourth straight game to the Wolverines. But what some folks have not heard is how everything spiraled out of control from a safety standpoint for Ryan Day and his family. 

    Speaking with the Columbus Dispatch, Nina Day, the wife of Ryan Day, spoke about the terrible events that came in the aftermath of the Michigan loss. The situation behind the scenes for the family had turned, in a dangerous manner. 

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    Head coach Ryan Day of the Ohio State Buckeyes celebrates with wife, Christina, and daughter after defeating the Oregon Ducks 41-21 in the Rose Bowl Game Presented by Prudential at Rose Bowl Stadium on January 01, 2025 in Pasadena, California. 

    “The time between the Michigan game and the Tennessee game was as low and dark as you could possibly imagine. Extremely negative. Unprecedented hate,” Nina Day explained. 

    When Ryan Day was eight years old, his father died by suicide. So, when fans somehow got hold of Nina Day’s cell phone number in the days following the Michigan loss, unfathomable messages started to pour in at a constant rate, before Nina decided it was best to just disconnect her phone. 

    “They told me multiple times to have Ryan follow in his father’s footsteps and kill himself,” Nina noted to the Dispatch. 

    Ryan Day walks off field

    Ohio State Buckeyes head coach Ryan Day walks off the field after the game against the Michigan Wolverines and the Ohio State Buckeyes on November 30, 2024, at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, OH. (Ian Johnson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    On the outside, Ryan Day continued to push forward, holding his weekly press conference, while waiting to see who his team would play in the first round of the college football playoff. But inside the family, things were starting to get out of control when it came to their safety. 

    According to Nina Day, their 16-year-old son, RJ, started to receive death threats on social media, while the family’s address was also posted, leading to Ryan Day hiring armed security guards to protect his family at their house. There was also a thought from Nina that she should take her kids and leave Columbus during this time, not knowing what the next month could bring. 

    “I think he, at times, second-guessed his decision to get into this and be in the spotlight that we’re in. He felt responsible and just felt bad that he had put us in this position. He promised us he’d get us out of it,” Nina Day mentioned about the conversations with her husband. 

    Ryan Day ‘Fought Like Hell’ For His Family During Ohio State’s CFP Run

    There are fans across all sports that take things way too seriously, and this is another instance of something that could not be controlled. There was no reason that the Day family needed to fear for their lives over a football game, I don’t care how much you’re paid, or what your job title is. 

    This is obviously the ugly part of sports, and it’s not as if this is the first time we’ve heard of coaches having to deal with these types of situations, and it won’t be the last. 

    Sherrone Moore shakes hands with Ryan Day

    Head coach Sherrone Moore of the Michigan Wolverines shakes hands with head coach Ryan Day of the Ohio State Buckeyes following the game at Ohio Stadium on November 30, 2024 in Columbus, Ohio.  (Jason Mowry/Getty Images)

    “He fought like hell and got us out of a very dark place that we were in five weeks ago because of his resilience, because I don’t think anybody really thought this was going to end the way it did,” Nina Day mentioned. “Everybody thought the season ended in November. 

    “All he kept telling me was ‘I want to bring you guys peace. I just want to bring you guys peace.’ And he knew that for us to feel any type of peace, he had to win it all.”

    All of this over a football game. A family fearing for their lives, needing armed security to guard their house, just to get a peaceful night of sleep and feel safe. 

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    While Nina Day mentioned that you cannot label an entire fan base as the ‘lunatic fringe’, there are certainly a number of people who should be held accountable for their actions towards the Day family. 

    As I watched Ryan Day celebrate with his family on the field Monday night, hugging each member of the family, there was certainly more to the story than just a head coach who was dealing with outside noise. 

  • Ohio mom bombarded with death threats after Black neighbor’s video goes viral: ‘Massive misunderstanding’

    Ohio mom bombarded with death threats after Black neighbor’s video goes viral: ‘Massive misunderstanding’

    An Ohio mother of two is speaking out after receiving vicious death threats both directly and on social media over a viral video that has caused some to smear her as “racist,” which she says is completely false and the result of a “massive misunderstanding.”

    Michelle Bishop spoke to Fox News Digital about the situation involving her neighbor, DaMichael Jenkins, who posted Ring camera footage of her in a panic at his front doorstep, believing she was being inappropriately followed by Jenkins and not believing his claim that he lived at the house he had pulled into. 

    The exchange has gone viral on social media, with news reports labeling her as a “Karen” who assumed Jenkins was a threat simply because of his race, which Bishop vehemently disputes. 

    Bishop told Fox News Digital that the incident in question began on a cold November night in Delaware County, Ohio, when she took her young daughter and son with her on a jog to go look at Christmas lights and a car with its headlights on was slowly driving behind them as they walked down a poorly lit street in the dark.

    ‘THE VIEW’ FUMES TRUMP IS HELPING RACISTS WITH DEI POLICIES

    DaMichael Jenkins, left, and Michelle Bishop. (Fox News)

    Bishop then explained that she moved her kids onto the sidewalk but that the car did not pass her “in a timely manner” and that the driver began asking her questions.

    “I didn’t answer, I walked into— I told my daughter, ‘walk up this driveway, turn here, don’t look back at the truck,’ and so we went into the driveway, ended up on the porch, was ringing the doorbell,” Bishop said. 

    “Nobody was answering at that point. The truck was backing into the driveway. He stayed in his truck. I could not see him and I look out at the driveway at that point and I said, ‘Is this your home?’ And he said, ‘Yes. And I said, ’I don’t believe that’ and in that moment I was in, just, complete defense mode. I was challenging it. There was no way of changing my mind at that point. I was completely in panic and just trying to protect my kids.”

    Bishop had, in fact, attempted to seek shelter in the home that belonged to Jenkins, and the Ring doorbell footage captures her telling Jenkins that she doesn’t believe he lives there before running to another nearby house and yelling for help.

    Footage from later shows Bishop telling Jenkins that he had “scared the crap” out of her and that she was “caught off guard.” Jenkins told Bishop he was not following her and was just admiring Christmas lights. 

    BLACK AMERICANS, COMMON SENSE AND OUR FUTURE

    Michelle Bishop

    Michelle Bishop speaks to Fox News Digital. (Fox News)

    Bishop tells Fox News Digital she has apologized many times, which the Jenkins family would not accept, and thought the issue was resolved until the video was posted on a local neighborhood Facebook group and ultimately picked up by the media, causing a firestorm of hateful messages to come her way attacking her as a racist. 

    It is causing massive devastation to our family in every way that you can possibly think,” she said. “Our family, our businesses. We are receiving hundreds, if not thousands, of threats at this point in our direct messages, to our phones, voicemails calling into stores. But some of the threats that we have received have become death threats.”

    “You and your children deserve to die slow and you should kill yourself or it will be done for you,” Bishop was told in one message. 

    “We know who you are and where you live. Your husband is going to come home to being a single Dad. You should be hung in public,” another message said. 

    “There are multiple that are very graphic and violent in regards to our children that I do not want to share here,” she added. “Our businesses have seen massive devastation, one of them having to close temporarily due to death threats, calling into our shop, saying that they are going to kill every last one of the employees. So it is affecting us in massive ways.”

    ATF ACCUSED OF ‘CIRCUMVENTING’ TRUMP ORDER TO PLACE DEI STAFF ON PAID LEAVE

    Social media is littered with posts calling Bishop “racist,” including one post that said, “Michelle Bishop… count your f—ing days.”

    Jenkins, a real estate developer, went on the “Nightcap” podcast with former NFL stars Shannon Sharpe and Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson earlier this week, a show with over 1.5 million subscribers on YouTube, and accused Bishop of racial profiling despite her claims that she did not know Jenkins’ race during the interaction.

    Bishop told Fox News Digital that she “absolutely” did not know Jenkins was Black, and that she even told the neighbor at the house she ran to when she panicked that the person might have been White.

    The headlights were behind me and then the first time I looked out in the driveway at his truck, the headlights were there and I was not specifically trying to look at him,” Bishop said. “I was addressing the situation. I absolutely did not know what he looked like. Like I said, I thought he was a young White man. It was all a massive misunderstanding. That’s all that it was.”

    Bishop has received some support on social media from prominent conservative accounts, including that of commentator and author Matt Walsh.

    “I’m late to this but of course the internet outrage mob got this situation completely wrong,” Walsh posted on X. “The woman saw a truck following behind her slowly. She panicked about the truck before she ever saw who was inside it. Later that night she came back and apologized for the mistake.”

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    Walsh continued, “That should have been the end of it. No harm, no foul, nobody was hurt. An innocent mistake. Instead this guy decides to put the footage online and shame her in front of the world. And unsurprisingly a bunch of slobbering idiots on social media ran with it uncritically and proceed to tear this woman’s life apart. Good job, everyone. Some of you will just never learn.”

    Bishop told Fox News Digital that she hopes to reconcile with the Jenkins family.

    I believe a love can cover a multitude of things and what happened that night was a massive misunderstanding,” she said. “We are lovers of all people, and if given the opportunity, like I said, I believe forgiveness should be given to all, and I would love to sit down with them.”

    “I think what happened that night was a massive misunderstanding,” continued Bishop. “I do hold their heart, hearing their perspective on things. I’ve never been in their shoes. I don’t know what they’re up against. I can’t speak to that. So hearing their point of view and how he felt, I understand that. But it really was a massive misunderstanding. I really wish, I do hope and wish that they understand that on that night I was a mama bear trying to protect my kids. That is all that. It was a massive misunderstanding and if given the opportunity, like I said, I would love to reconcile that relationship.”

    Jenkins did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

  • Ravens’ Mark Andrews breaks silence after critical drop in playoffs led to death threats: ‘Absolutely gutted’

    Ravens’ Mark Andrews breaks silence after critical drop in playoffs led to death threats: ‘Absolutely gutted’

    Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews has spoken for the first time since his crucial dropped two-point conversion in the divisional round of the NFL playoffs.

    Andrews took the high road despite facing ridicule and even death threats after a 27-25 loss to the Buffalo Bills. 

    “It’s impossible to adequately express how I feel,” Andrews wrote on his Instagram page. “I’m absolutely gutted by what happened on Sunday. I’m devastated for my teammates, my coaches and Ravens fans. 

    “I pour every ounce of my being into playing at the highest level possible, because I love my team and the game of football like nothing else. That is why it’s taken me until now to collect my thoughts and address this publicly. 

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    Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews drops a pass on a two-point conversion attempt late in the fourth quarter against the Buffalo Bills in a 2025 AFC divisional round game at Highmark Stadium. (Gregory Fisher/Imagn Images)

    “Even though the shock and disappointment are unlike anything I’ve felt before, I refuse to let the situation define me. I promise that this adversity will only make me stronger and fuel us as we move forward. 

    “I thank everyone who has shown me and our team genuine support these past several days. Despite the negativity, I’ve seen heartfelt love and encouragement, including from those who have generously donated to the Breakthrough T1D organization. Even when the moment seems darkest, perspective can reveal that there’s still a lot of light in this world. 

    “I’m now going to do my part to bounce back and contribute to it. #GodBless”

    RAVENS STAR PLEADS FOR SOMEBODY TO BEAT CHIEFS: ‘WE CAN’T LET THEM KEEP GETTING AWAY WITH THIS’

    A GoFundMe was launched by the “Bills Mafia,” which has raised over $100,000 for Andrews’ foundation. The Ravens addressed the classy move by the Bills fan base Wednesday. 

    “Shout out to Bills Mafia for showing support to our guy Mark Andrews and donating to the @BreakthroughT1D organization, which works towards curing and improving the lives of those dealing with Type 1 diabetes,” a Ravens’ X post said. 

    Andrews’ drop couldn’t have come at a worse time for the Ravens because a successful two-point conversion would’ve tied the game in Orchard Park, New York, at 27 with less than two minutes to play in the fourth quarter. 

    Mark Andrews on field

    Mark Andrews of the Baltimore Ravens drops a pass on a two-point conversion attempt during the second half of a divisional playoff game against the Buffalo Bills at Highmark Stadium Jan. 19, 2025, in Orchard Park, N.Y.  (Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images)

    Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson threw the ball perfectly to his usually trusty tight end running toward the right pylon, but Andrews couldn’t secure it in the frigid, snowy conditions. And the reaction said it all from the Ravens on the field and the sideline. 

    The Bills knew they had escaped potential defeat if the game had gone to overtime. Instead, the Bills are heading to Kansas City this weekend for another chapter of their rivalry with the Chiefs.

    Andrews’ teammates were quick to console him on the sideline, where he looked shocked at what had transpired. And though he admitted feeling gutted after the game, Jackson defended Andrews, saying it was a team loss.

    Mark Andrews runs with ball

    Baltimore Ravens tight end Mark Andrews runs the ball against the Cleveland Browns during the first quarter at Huntington Bank Field. (Scott Galvin/Imagn Images)

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    Andrews, the third-round pick in the 2018 NFL Draft has played seven seasons with Baltimore. He finished his 2024 campaign with a career-high 11 receiving touchdowns among his 55 receptions for 673 yards. 

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