Summary

Fox News host Julie Banderas warned that President-elect Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs—25% on products from Mexico and Canada and 10% on those from China—could significantly raise costs for Americans, as many businesses rely on foreign goods.

While some companies are shifting to U.S.-based suppliers or stockpiling goods ahead of the tariffs, Banderas noted that buying American often results in higher prices.

She highlighted that the financial burden would likely fall on consumers, questioning, “Who’s going to pay for that? We are.”

Economists have also warned of inflation risks.

53 points

Wild that we talk about Fox News like we’re breaking into a different world. Even wilder that this person is being honest with their viewers.

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148 points

How can a financially broken, over stressed, oppressed public fight? This is by design, to further oppress, divide and conquer. But I’ll wait over here with the other couple million people that have been screaming this for months till the shit hits the fan and we can actually start working toward a common greater good.

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19 points

Now might be a good time to get into the torch and pitchfork business

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5 points

That’s old school. You gotta get into the modern equivalents: Airplane tracking and semi-autonomous robotics.

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51 points

BuT tHe StOcK mArKeT iS uP!

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28 points

THINK OF THE POOR SHAREHOLDERS YOU UNGRATEFUL MONSTER. /s

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7 points

I’m always thinking of them.

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3 points

I do think of them. In terms of cooking recipes. Yummy yummy shareholder steak

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9 points

Most Americans do not follow the markets and are clueless to their existance. You are giving them too much credit.

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0 points
*

But they have no idea when some neoliberal talking head tells them that data shows the economy is fine, that person is talking about the stock market.

Although this time around I’m not so sure that line go up. Looking for signs for when to cash out of the casino.

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24 points

And it won’t be once sales drop precipitously across entire industries. Lots of manufacturing simply doesn’t exist in the US anymore, and there isn’t enough time to start it up before massive economic impacts.

The effects of this Trump administration will be clear and they will be bad. I’m somewhat optimistic that they will eventually start to generate a kind of unity we haven’t seen in the US in a long time. But, to be clear, it will be a very, very, very rough few years to get there, and it assumes the world isn’t consumed by massive wars anyway.

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6 points

I keep thinking about how musk was talking about the upcoming hardship… I wonder if he was maybe referring to this too. He had to have known.

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4 points
*

I’ve been asking people, might as well ask you. When’s the right time to cash out of the casino? Maybe buy puts?

Might seem crass to talk about making money off this disaster, but I have people I love to take care of.

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11 points

What’s gonna happen is that prices will go up, and companies in the US will gouge even harder on top of that because they have an external excuse to. Maybe things will get so bad that Democrats are able to win in the next election, but after the Biden administration, it’s not like they have any credibility when it comes to standing up to price gouging in any meaningful way.

Democrats will need a candidate who isn’t some preordained corpodem like the last 3 cycles. Because if they do that again, they will be running as second worst yet the fuck again, and any noises they make about wanting prices to come down or wages to go up will be just that. Noise.

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9 points

till the shit

Weird hobby.

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13 points

It ain’t gonna till itself.

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16 points

Till, until, and 'til are all valid and equivalent with till actually being the oldest word of the bunch. I found this out the hard way when I made fun of a school poster for using what I thought was the wrong till

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8 points

I think that’s the thing. The system will fail if all these policies are put in place. But at this point, it sounds like a lot of voters need an example of what such a failure looks like.

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6 points

That’s kind of my point. They don’t want to believe the truth, they will just have to experience reality. It’s like a kid and a stove, sometimes they will only learn if you let them touch it.

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5 points
*

I agree in principal, but my concern with this is that people will see it happening to them, done by trump and will believe trump when they’re told that they’re suffering because of “the illegals” or the “woke mind virus” or whatever doublethink bullshit trump’s advisors come up with.

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21 points

Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose.

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3 points

That’s all that Bobby left me.

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14 points

It’s going to be fucking hilarious when these shitcunts get wrecked.

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-29 points
*

But they won’t.
The “solution” will be just popping out a few more welfare babies. Thus continuing the downward spiral even faster.

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6 points

Man I hope that’s sarcasm

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11 points

You don’t think social safety nets are first on the chopping block for these assholes? You think welfare queens are gonna be alright? They never existed.

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6 points

The red states are full of welfare queens.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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-43 points

Literally companies could start on-shoring, how foreign car makers all have plants in America now, but you know doom and gloom for outrage bait.

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19 points

Auto parts generally aren’t made in the US, only assembled here.

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7 points

Toyota is kind of a counter example here. I’m grateful to them for opening several factories in my home state.

It’s funny to me that you can buy a (partially) American made and assembled Toyota. Or be a real patriot and buy a Chinese made and Mexican assembled F-150.

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16 points

You’ll be surprised how expensive everything is to build if you pay domestic wages instead of buying things dirt cheap from other countries where wages are low due to slave-like working conditions. This is probably what Trump wants to establish in the US, but when other factors like housing, food etc are already way more expensive than they are in those countries, this creates a poverty hellscape for y’all. The result will be that people can’t even afford to live at the standard of a chinese factory worker. Enjoy.

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4 points
*

No, it’s not wages that would increase prices huge amounts. They’d increase the price of goods slightly (depending on the good) but for the most part the biggest cost factor that increases when you decide to make something in the US is regulations.

Ya know, rules that prevent companies from dumping their toxic waste wherever TF they want. It’s not just the regulations that apply to a specific company’s business but all the regulations in their supply chain.

Consider a PCB manufacturer: They need epoxies, fiberglass, copper, gold, tin, and silver to make PCBs along with a shitton of associated chemicals. All of those things ultimately come from heavily regulated industries (because we don’t want smelter waste full of things like lead, mercury, cobalt, and worse things winding up in our food and water). All that regulation costs money to deal with. Not just in actually complying with the regulations but also hiring people knowledgeable enough to make sure they’re complying (and doing so in the least expensive way possible).

In countries like China regulations are basically non-existent because even if they have them officials can easily and cheaply be bribed to get around them (e.g. poisoned baby formula). Furthermore, the people are vastly more ignorant of health and pollution than your average idiot in the US. If some dude sees a company dumping tires on the side of the road they’re likely to call the cops because that’s obviously illegal. I’m China that doesn’t happen because the people will be unlikely to understand the (environmental/downstream) consequences of that or will suspect the cops (and local officials) are in on it and reporting the illegal dumping could get them disappeared.

The most toxic industries are all overseas and we really do rely on them to keep supply chains going. Bringing them back onshore would drastically increase the cost of a shitton of goods just because there’s no cheap way to dispose of byproducts here and there’s way more requirements around handling such things.

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3 points

the biggest cost factor that increases when you decide to make something in the US is regulations.

I would love to see a source or some data backing this up.

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3 points
*

So Trump guts all the regulations.

Problem solved /s

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2 points

You’re right that regard. I was simplyfing the matter by only using wages as the primary factor. Of course it is a combination of factors which drive production costs, many of which you just explained. However, the end result is the same: Building products on shore is expensive. Someone has to pay the price.

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26 points
*

I mean let’s think this through. Say it costs many millions, billions even, to create new manufacturing plants for any of the major players. It will take probably years to complete and on top of that US workers have much stronger protections than most of the world with significantly higher labor costs to boot. consumers would immediately pay more because of the tariffs, and then even if the “protectionism” works, we’re still paying more, even if it’s to US workers and companies. This isn’t even to mention that the taxpayer is likely going to foot the bill for construction of new factories as they’ve done with Intel etc.

i’m struggling to see any merits to this idea. Can you elaborate?

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-1 points

I think making products in America is a wonderful idea. As you said, won’t stop the tariff price increases, but there’s merit in investing in manufacturing in countries more capable of increased automation like the United States, Japan, and Western Europe thanks to skilled engineering workforces. This is especially true because if you intend to do manufacturing ethically you’re better off competing somewhere where the minimums in worker treatment and environmental protection are higher.

Now if you need manual labor as cheap as possible, go to South Asia and South America, we can’t compete with them on that unless we’re imposing ludicrous tariffs.

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1 point

Why are tariffs the tool? Why now? Why disrupt anything for the benefit of corporations and their… thousand(s?) of workers? Unemployment is quite low already, and as far as I know manufacturing has been largely leaving the US for what I assume are economic reasons that will persist longer than the tariffs.

Why not laws requiring ethical sourcing of materials and labor if ethics is your concern?

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7 points
*

The other big risk is that in 4 years, the tariffs could be removed with a change of government, or earlier when the GOP realises how bad their mistake is.

So these businesses have to decide do they want to invest billions in plants that could be redundant before they’re even completed.

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4 points

On shoring takes a long time and American labor is more expensive than Chinese and Mexican labor. I work in manufacturing and it takes years to build capacity when you already have a facility. Oh and think multimillion dollar investments with high risk.

I’m not saying they can’t onshore. I’m saying it’ll be slow and expensive and possibly more expensive than not, and because it’s slow the customers will eat the cost long enough that they won’t lower prices when they finish.

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1 point

I want to believe this is true. I hope that things go that way - if America leads a shift in the way the world gets it’s goods that could be a good thing. But I’m not sure that’s what will happen, honestly.

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7 points

Life is not Factorio, brah. You can’t just plop a factory down and start production. It will take a decade and cost billions. At which point a new administration will be here and will repeal the tariffs.

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1 point

Repealing tarrifs doesnt work like that. The countries we tarrif will do the same right back, and wont be eager to repeal them.

Goods will be more expensive forever

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1 point
*

Honda: Hold my sake

I get it for semiconductors, though. Unless there’s some loophole for the parts inside of devices, we’re kinda boned.

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