You are seriously advocating that we should kill billions in trade for a drain cleaning device that someone "invented" that go knocked off by the Chinese (That's what his "FACTUAL" clip was about, for anyone who didn't view it)? Again, are you fucking serious? Again, have you ever read a trade agreement? Again, have you ever engaged in international trade? Again, do you have the first clue WTF you're talking about!?
This mentality, your mentality, is exactly the problem. You know nothing about international trade and the benefits that even "unfair" agreements bring to the U.S. and clearly know nothing about the impacts of nihilistically blowing everything up in a tantrum for some kind of child-like belief that somehow the big old world is being "unfair" to us poor wittle U.S. people. You fall for the old "no pain no gain" thing without even a rudimentary understanding of what we have to gain and what we have to lose (hint, we have almost everything to lose and the handful of jobs that come from drain cleaner inventor "entrepreneurs" to gain), let alone any careful computation of exactly what those potential future gains and losses are.
Seriously, stop for a minute and think about where you came to this strong opinion? Did you base it on careful original research? Did you actually read any of the trade documents? Conduct or at least read any quantitative research about international trade and trade agreements? Did you engage in any trade based business? Because the overwhelming vast majority of folks who came to their opinion on trade and tariffs using the methods I just described agree that the current tantrum based trade wars are incredibly destructive for the U.S. in the long term! China stops buying soybeans from the U.S. and develops other sources of supply closer to home (which they have) that's a long-term loss. Tariffs go away and that business doesn't come back. Same with pretty much everything for which a substitute exists (substitutes are something we who study international trade and business have thought a lot about, have you?). Are these things you've thought about, done quantitative research on, experienced? If not, have you stopped to ask yourself if you're really being reasonable to insist on holding so tightly to such a viewpoint that you originally arrived at based on no more than a few news clips and guys in your political bubble at the coffee shop with a similar lack of experience and education on this subject?
Now I know exactly what you're going to do now, you're going to go scour the internet for a PhD who will say Trump's trade wars are a good thing. The confirmation bias is a strong thing, and since sadly you're probably unfamiliar with it as well you'll be unable to stop yourself. But that's you just looking for support for an opinion you formed based on incredibly incomplete information. Is that really a rational way to go through life? You're smarter than that, you really are. Don't let yourself be duped by a political framework that I doubt you even chose but was chosen for you by the people you grew up around and whose assumptions you've probably never even identified let alone rigorously examined.