Episode 4761: UK On The Brink Of Civil War; The Dream Of Becoming Tech God


Posted originally on Rumble on By Bannon’s War Room on: September, 6, 2025

Episode 4760: Seizing The Institutions And Taking Over Nations Independence


Posted originally on Rumble on By Bannon’s War Room on: September, 6, 2025

JOE ALLEN: The Influence of Tech Oligarchs and Government Contracts


Posted originally on Rumble on By Bannon’s War Room on: September, 6, 2025

OREN CASS: Export Restrictions On Manufactured Chips Impacts National Security


Posted originally on Rumble on By Bannon’s War Room on: September, 6, 2025

STEVE BANNON: The Destructive Alliance of Corporate and Government Power


Posted originally on Rumble on By Bannon’s War Room on: September, 6, 2025

STRAKA: NYC Has 4.7M Registered Voters, But Turnout Is Usually Abysmal (23–25%). Zohran Mamdani Pulled 468K In The Primary. With The Nation’s Eyes On This Race And Turnout Surging, Momentum Is Against Him—If We Drive Voters Out


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: September 5, 2025

CHRISTINA BOBB: By Law in Fulton County, GA, The Board Must Seat 2 Republicans, 2 Democrats, And An Independent. But The Commissioners Have Flat Out Refused To Seat The 2 GOP Members Even After Three Court Orders


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: September 5, 2025

MIKE DAVIS: Lisa Cook, One Of The Seven Fed Governors, Got Caught Committing Mortgage Fraud. Three Times. She Claimed Investment Properties Were “Primary Residences” To Get Lower Rates


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: September 5, 2025

Episode 4741: The Lies Behind Tariff Uncertainty; Live From Mt. Vernon


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: September 5, 2025

US Manufacturing Contracts for Sixth Consecutive Month


Posted originally on Sep 3, 2025 by Martin Armstrong |  

manufacturing man 1

America cannot find its footing in manufacturing. The ISM Manufacturing PMI came in at 48.7 in August 2025, marking the sixth consecutive month of contraction. Although the figure has improved from July’s reading of 48, there is ongoing confirmation that capital is bleeding out of US manufacturing.

New orders did rise to 51.4, a stark uptick from July’s reading of 47.1, but production fell to 47.8 in August from 51.4 in July. “In August, U.S. manufacturing activity contracted at a slightly slower rate, with new orders growth the biggest factor in the 0.7-percentage point gain of the Manufacturing PMI,” said Susan Spence, chair of the ISM’s survey committee. “However, since production contracted at a rate nearly equal to the expansion in new orders, the Manufacturing PMI increase was nominal.”

The issue is far deeper than a capital fleeing uncertainty from tariffs, as this issue has been ongoing. In fact, one of Trump’s motives for implementing tariffs was to boost domestic manufacturing. Trump openly stated that he wanted companies to move manufacturing to the US to avoid tariffs. This was intended to promote domestic trade as companies will seek to avoid levies. We did see a temporary uptick in manufacturing demand when these tariffs were announced but it was not enough to sustain the sector. Although companies began to invest in the US, overall trade remained volatile. There were supply chain issues by May, and come September, the US is still at a standstill regarding tariffs. Nations have even halted postal shipments to the US entirely as they cannot process the ongoing tariff changes.

Again, US manufacturing was in a dire situation before Trump entered the office. The Inflation Reduction Act promised to fund the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which was intended to expand American manufacturing, but regulation and an emphasis on clean energy initiatives drove business away. The Biden Administration had promised to add 1 million manufacturing jobs to the US but failed miserably.

This has nothing to do with America being uncompetitive. The American worker is among the most productive in the world. But if you add 30–40% in taxes and compliance costs on top of wages, while competitors in Asia operate under far leaner systems, capital naturally migrates to where it will be treated best.

Manufacturing in the United States has been in decline for decades due to systemic policy failures. The politicians will blame China and tariffs for the downturn. The contraction we see today is merely the continuation of a decades-long trend set in motion by shortsighted policies.