Tomorrow’s another day - And series of policy decisions.
And Day Whatever of the Trump reality show. He’s probably been missing the attention this last couple of days so who knows what mad stuff we have to look forward to this week!
Tomorrow’s another day - And series of policy decisions.
1. They're going to bring back the jobs and have Americans putting in the tiny screws in iPhones.
2. They're going to open factories to build iPhones and fully automate the process to save money and not create new jobs, except perhaps to maintain the robots.
3. They're going to allow tech companies to keep making tech products abroad as they did before. Now there's little reason to open factories here at all.
What's happening tomorrow?
The exemption of smartphones, laptops and other electronic products from import tariffs on China will be short-lived, top US officials have said, with Donald Trump warning that no one was “getting off the hook.”
“There was no Tariff ‘exception’, Trump said in a social media post on Sunday. “These products are subject to the existing 20% Fentanyl Tariffs, and they are just moving to a different Tariff ‘bucket.’”
In the post on his Truth Social platform, Trump promised to launch a national security trade investigation into the semiconductor sector and the “whole electronics supply chain”.
“We will not be held hostage by other Countries, especially hostile trading Nations like China,” he added.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...f-uncertainties-global-supply-chains-pressure
The White House had announced on Friday the exclusion of some electronic products from steep reciprocal tariffs on China. US stock markets were expected to stage a recovery after the announcement. Shares in Apple and chip maker Nvidia were on course to soar after tariffs on their products imported into the US were lifted for 90 days.
However, Trump’s commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, said on Sunday that critical technology products from China would face separate new duties along with semiconductors within the next two months.
Liz who?Another thing Trump is giving us is the ability to see what would have happened in the UK if Liz Truss just never quit and pursued her agenda unhindered.
Another day, another flip-flop. I wonder what tomorrow will bring!Oh, so it will be this..
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Trump warns exemptions on smartphones, electronics will be short-lived, promises future tariffs
The US president has said no one is ‘getting off the hook’, as he promises to launch a national security investigation into the semiconductor sectorwww.theguardian.com
Another day, another flip-flop. I wonder what tomorrow will bring!
Seems the spiralling tax on Chinese goods which was u-turned to exempt Apple, sorry tech products, may be subject to a further u-turn.Another day, another flip-flop. I wonder what tomorrow will bring!
Sony has raised the price of its PlayStation 5 consoles worldwide, citing "challenging" market conditions.
The price of the digital edition of the PS5 console in the UK has increased by £40 to £429.99.
Its cost for European customers has risen by approximately €50 to €499.99.
The company pointed to high inflation and "fluctuating exchange rates" in a blog post explaining its decision, external.
Sony Interactive Entertainment (SIE) executive Isabelle Tomatis said PS5 prices in Australia and New Zealand would also rise - including for physical versions that have a disc drive.
The company said the price of the physical edition of the console would not change in the UK.
But it has reduced the cost of its disc drives - which are required for those with digital consoles who want to play physical media - from £99.99 to £69.99 in the UK.
Piers Harding-Rolls, research director at Ampere Analysis, said the disc-free version of the PS5 had formed a larger share of Sony's total sales over the last 18 months.
He said this new price adjustment had brought "the digital edition more into alignment with the standard version".
Cost of tariffs?
While President Donald Trump has revealed a tariff exemption for some electronics, video game consoles are not thought to be among them.
Christopher Dring, who writes about the gaming industry in The Game Business newsletter, said while Sony did not directly mention tariffs in its decision, their "knock-on effect" could have an impact on pricing worldwide.
"The US is the biggest market for video game consoles, and rather than simply increase prices there, it's possible the likes of PlayStation could increase pricing globally in an effort to protect, as best they can, the US market," he told the BBC.
"Ultimately, the era when game consoles went down in price over time is certainly over."
The price increase comes as Nintendo's launch of its rival Switch 2 console was marred by the impact of US tariffs on markets worldwide.
It said it would suspend US pre-orders for the device so it could "assess the potential impact of tariffs and evolving market conditions".
And Mr Harding-Rolls said he felt Sony may have been given "the green light to increase pricing" due to the Switch 2's £395 price tag.
"At its current pricing, the digital version would be cheaper than the Switch 2, leaving Sony with some breathing space to increase its pricing, while remaining competitive across the console hardware market," he said.
This is the second time Sony has increased the RRP for its latest console.
Its initial £360 price tag for the disc drive-free digital edition was seen as a low price at the time, as Sony sought to match its price to that of the Xbox Series X.
But it rose the price by £30 in 2022 - meaning with the latest price increase, the digital edition of the PS5 has increased by roughly £70 since it first went on sale.
- My comment is not only sarcastic. Japan's tremendous industrial success from the 1960s, especially in consumer and precision goods, was based in part on an extremely robust and consistent underlying infrastructure of capital goods manufacturers (all kinds of production equipment), standards (think of the JIS screw head, for example) and practices (the famous Total Quality approach) . This infrastructure was actively maintained by the "alliance" of business conglomerates and the Japanese government. Replicating that in the US today will be... folkloric.
In a word, no.Does he ever get asked tough questions by opposition politicians? I know there’s no direct equivalent of our (largely useless anyway) PMQs, but is there anything to put him under a harsher spotlight?
I'm not an expert on the US constitution, but my understanding is that Trump uses executive orders more frequently than most other presidents, and that executive orders bypass scrutiny by congress. Theoretically executive orders can be challenged in the courts.This might be a daft question, but how exactly does Trump govern the USA?
In a word, no.
Because their government isn't parliamentary.
Yeah Trump II is shaking up to be quite the outlier. He's issued 124 EOs so far, Biden issued 162, Trump I issued 220 (itself quite high), Obama across two terms was 276, Bush II across his two terms was 291 and Clinton over two terms was 364. So if he keeps up the pace he's going to issue a lot more than has been the recent norm. Though he still has someway to go to match FDR he managed 1,707 in his first term alone!I'm not an expert on the US constitution, but my understanding is that Trump uses executive orders more frequently than most other presidents, and that executive orders bypass scrutiny by congress. Theoretically executive orders can be challenged in the courts.
The advantage / disadvantage with executive orders is that the next, or indeed any future president can cancel them without needing to go through congress. So all these executive orders issued by Trump can be cancelled by the next administration if they so choose.I'm not an expert on the US constitution, but my understanding is that Trump uses executive orders more frequently than most other presidents, and that executive orders bypass scrutiny by congress. Theoretically executive orders can be challenged in the courts.
The GOP majority in both Houses is small, so literally a handful of Republicans voting with the Democrats could pass a motion that opposes something Trump is doing. This has actually happened in the Senate with Canada tariffs and there is potential for Trump's legislation to be defeated if it goes to Congress. However, as I understand it, overturning an executive order requires legislation to be actively passed by both Houses. That requires the Bill to go on the agenda in the House (controlled by the GOP Speaker) and to get a supermajority in the Senate (requiring more Republicans to vote with the Dems).However, the GOP control both Chambers of Congress and shows no interest in restraining the power of the Executive and is therefore seemingly content for their powers to be sapped away through inaction.
Never mind without trial, the reason can be just “suspected”, there doesn’t need to be any actual evidence...I can't believe that it only just dawned on me, based on a report from MSNBC, that the most chilling part of the whole process of shipping people off to the hell-hole prison in El Salvador is that it's being done without trial.
This is such a violation of basic American rights to due process, which have been repeatedly held to apply to both citizens and non-citizens alike that I struggle to understand how they got where they are, so quickly. The idea that, in the "Land of the Free", "Give me Liberty or give me death", and "Don't tread on me" people can be grabbed on the street by unidentified, hooded men, bundled into unmarked vehicles and then shipped off to another country without so much as a hearing or chance to even speak with a lawyer should send shivers down anyone's spine.
Especially since, as in the case of Kilmar Ábrego García, there's no guarantee of being returned to the USA even though they have admitted he shouldn't have been sent there in the first place!
Basically you just need to be brown...Never mind without trial, the reason can be just “suspected”, there doesn’t need to be any actual evidence...
It is ok. These people are forigns. OBVIOUSLY:I can't believe that it only just dawned on me, based on a report from MSNBC, that the most chilling part of the whole process of shipping people off to the hell-hole prison in El Salvador is that it's being done without trial.
As per a Threads post I saw earlier today. I'm okay with deporting US citizens who have multiple felony convictions, but only if they're demonstrated repeat offenders. So how about we set the bar at 33 convictions? More than that and you get deported...But, phew, he did add US born criminals could be deported so that's fine then. Wait, but what if they decide something you do, or are, is a crime? You protested against something? That's illegal. You're gay? That's illegal now (never say never).
Once arrested then you can now be deported at all. Due process? Sue us... Bye.
The 'first they came for...' text is perfectly apt because Trump has said many times he wants American born citizens to be deported. Some say he's joking but clearly he isn't.
He said he'd have to look at the law, but now he's ignoring the Supreme Court it's quite obvious he's not bothered about that either.
But, phew, he did add US born criminals could be deported so that's fine then. Wait, but what if they decide something you do, or are, is a crime? You protested against something? That's illegal. You're gay? That's illegal now (never say never).
Once arrested then you can now be deported at all. Due process? Sue us... Bye.
I think if the Supreme Court doesn't step in and do something this could be the week we officially declare the USA has become a dictatorship. Trump can just do whatever be wants without any fear whatsoever.
Am I being hyperbolic here? No, I don't think so.
Didn't some people get tased at a town hall today/last night?