No, I'm not. You keep conflating the tariff with the price of the good. They aren't the same thing. We aren't talking about the final price after adding the tariff. We are only talking about the tariff. It isn't that complicated. There is nowhere in math where 110% > 2. That isn't how percentages work.
You just admitted they are different things when you said this. I don't know why you are throwing such a fit over this. If I am wrong, then go right ahead and prove it by converting 110% into a scalar value greater than two. You can't, because that isn't how math works.
You're wrong. See my reply to u/hiddenempire.
No, I'm not. You keep conflating the tariff with the price of the good. They aren't the same thing. We aren't talking about the final price after adding the tariff. We are only talking about the tariff. It isn't that complicated. There is nowhere in math where 110% > 2. That isn't how percentages work.
Then try to explain this to me: 110% of what? What value or amount are you assuming that this 100% to which you're adding 110% tariff even is?
You just admitted they are different things when you said this. I don't know why you are throwing such a fit over this. If I am wrong, then go right ahead and prove it by converting 110% into a scalar value greater than two. You can't, because that isn't how math works.