Try GOLD - Free
Tariffs, Trump, Tradition, and the Tyranny of Tantrums
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
|October 05, 2025
Only someone in nationalist self-denial will think Donald Trump’s tariffs are taxes, not taunts.

India’s historical memory is best riposte to this Wild Bill Hickok’s shooting spree by never forgetting that India was once the workshop of the ancient world. For centuries, caravans along the Silk Route were laden with the produce of India such as spices of Malabar, muslins from Bengal, indigo of Gujarat and the shawls of Kashmir. We exported spices, textiles, precious stones, and ivory to Rome which sent back glassware, wine, perfumes, and silver. We were not then an “emerging market”; we were the world’s market, not because we consumed, but because we created.
The Europeans nearly bankrupted themselves importing Indian pepper; Romans bewailed that their women’s fondness for Indian cotton was draining their treasury, Arab merchants, borne by the monsoon winds across the Arabian Sea, returned home laden with cinnamon, and calicoes, so much so that Al-Beruni wrote that no corner of the known world was untouched by India’s produce. Chinese pilgrims Faxian and Xuanzang marveled at the artistry of our looms and the abundance of our markets. India was not merely on the Silk Route; it embroidered it.
This story is from the October 05, 2025 edition of The New Indian Express Vijayawada.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The New Indian Express Vijayawada
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Gill new ODI captain; Rohit, Virat in but no long-term guarantees
SHUBMAN Gill was named as the men’s ODI captain of the national team, a post previously held by Rohit Sharma.
1 min
October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
'I have a Moral Code for Playing Villains'
Sharon Stone speaks with Katie Ellis about her latest film, Nobody 2, and the controversies that shot her to fame
3 mins
October 05, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Out of Office
Gen Z is rapidly abandoning the traditional 9-to-5 for flexible careers that allow authenticity and viable work hours
4 mins
October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
The Lost Art of Agenda-free Conversations
I spent last weekend in Fuengirola, a seaside town on Andalusia’s Mediterranean coast. Successive waves of cultures and subcultures have shaped this Spanish region, each leaving its imprint in indelible ways. Yet what struck me even more than the pristine blue waters and fusion architecture was a unique conversational practice. Across Fuengirola’s restaurants, I kept noticing the same thing: tables where the meal had clearly ended but no one was leaving.
2 mins
October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Jadeja and his never-ending output
AROUND 1890, Karl Elsener, a Swiss inventor, had found out that his country needed a lot of tools to carry out everyday tasks.
2 mins
October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
The Collector's Pour
What began with stamps and miniature bottles grew into one of the world's most extraordinary whisky collections
3 mins
October 05, 2025
The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Fishy Business and Family Feuds
This murder mystery of quirky characters blends Bengali gothic literature with sharp humour and sly feminism
2 mins
October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Tariffs, Trump, Tradition, and the Tyranny of Tantrums
Only someone in nationalist self-denial will think Donald Trump’s tariffs are taxes, not taunts.
3 mins
October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
Stew Happens in Ladakh
Shaped by the resilience of mountains, Ladakh's food story runs deeper than just momo and thukpa
2 mins
October 05, 2025

The New Indian Express Vijayawada
When Our National Spectacle Crushes Its Own
Hathras in 2024 at a religious satsang, where followers stampede in a rush of blind devotion, while the state machinery busies itself trying to control the narrative. Even at the greatest of religious festivals, the Kumbh Mela, where millions gather, crowd-related deaths occur with horrifying regularity, often covered up and casually dismissed as a ‘logistical inevitability.’
4 mins
October 05, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size