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I can’t afford this Trump economy

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Wow… I heard he went to Davis high school but I don’t know for sure. His latest video has like 70M views and he’s uncovered a serious network of major fraud in Minnesota. Crazy! Could you imagine if democrats had elected Waltz and his billions of fraud as the vice president? Holy ****.
Waltz is atop the worst fraud in potentially world history. Any remaining Democrats are the dumbest sheep in history.


View: https://x.com/nickshirleyy/status/2004642794862961123?s=46&t=PfGBft52CF1a98VsjZzilw
 
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You *******s still don’t have a spin for the Minnesota Somali fraud yet? You all still waiting for your opinions to be told to you?
I don’t see the 18% approval rating for democrats jumping but you retards here will still defend them. You’ve devoted your lives to being brain dead tds cultists. You can’t turn back now.
 
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Trump’s tariffs are a success? Muhahaha….

It is
inaccurate to say that imported goods are getting cheaper as a result of Trump's tariffs, and economists generally do not consider the tariffs a success based on this metric. The consensus among economic studies is that tariffs increase prices for both imported and domestically produced goods, with the costs largely borne by U.S. consumers and businesses.

Impact on Prices
  • Imported goods prices have increased: Studies show that tariffs have led to higher prices for imported goods. One working paper found that imported goods became about 4% more expensive shortly after the 2025 tariffs were introduced, relative to the pre-tariff trend.
  • Domestic goods prices have also increased: To remain competitive with the now more expensive imports, U.S. domestic producers also raised their prices. Retail prices have risen on average by about 4.9 percentage points relative to the pre-tariff trend across various categories, with higher increases for imported goods.
  • Cost passed to consumers: The tariffs are effectively a tax on imported goods, which U.S. importing companies pay to the federal government. Businesses have passed on a significant portion of these increased costs to consumers through higher retail prices. The Yale Budget Lab estimates the tariffs amount to an average tax increase per U.S. household of $1,400 in 2026.
  • Foreign firms not absorbing the cost: Contrary to the argument that foreign exporters would absorb the costs to maintain market share, evidence indicates that foreign producers have not significantly lowered their prices.
 
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