Saturday, May 17, 2025

Something to Know - 17 May

The razzle-dazzle of the Trump Show in the Middle East was his way of bullying his way in foreign affairs.   His problem is the rising cost of living caused by his ridiculous and uncalled for tariffs.   Sellers are going to pass the costs on to the consumers, and the way things look, Trump's favorability is going to tank.   He does not want the purchasing public to know that he is the blame for it all.   Once the ball starts rolling, Trump will be the blame for everything that has gone, is, and will be gone are his fault.   "It's the Economy, stupid".   It usually works that way, every time.

Robert Reich 
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1:50 PM (7 hours ago)
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Friends,

Walmart, the world's largest retailer, says Trump's tariffs are "too high" and it will have to raise prices because of them.

"Given the magnitude of the tariffs, even at the reduced levels announced this week … the higher tariffs will result in higher prices," Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said yesterday.

Walmart is the largest retailer in the United States. It has huge buying power and supply-chain options. If Walmart can't keep prices down, don't count on any anyone else doing so.

Trump must be livid. A few weeks ago he chewed out Jeff Bezos after Amazon considered displaying the added cost of tariffs on some items. Trump's press secretary called Bezos's plan a "hostile and political act." So Bezos — sycophant that he is — backed down.

Last week, after toymaker Mattel said it would raise prices because of the Trump tariffs, Trump — appearing to regard Mattel as a nation — said "they're the only country I've heard" that's done such a thing, and he threatened to levy a 100 percent tariff on it.

But Walmart has just said out loud what every other seller in America, including Amazon and Mattel, clearly knows: As their costs rise because of the Trump tariffs, their prices to consumers will rise, too.

Expect those price hikes to begin later in May and increase much further in June.

The University of Michigan's consumer sentiment survey, released today, showed the second-lowest level on record — down almost 30 percent since the start of the year, right before Trump took office.

Nearly three-fourths of respondents — including a notable share of Republicans — mentioned tariffs.

Funny, 30 percent is almost as much as Trump's poll numbers have dropped since he took office.

I expect that by June 14 — when many of us will be demonstrating against Trump's usurpation of our democracy — prices will be soaring and his polls will be in the tanking even further. Perhaps enough to give Republican lawmakers some spine.

So maybe "No Kings" Day should also be "No Trump Tariffs" Day


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Juan Matute
The Harold Wilke House 
Claremont, California

Who is Asset Kraznov?
(we know where he is)


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