
Trade Will Move on Without the United States
The tariffs will destroy another pillar of American power and leave a vacuum for others to fill.
The tariffs will destroy another pillar of American power and leave a vacuum for others to fill.
Deliberately insulting other countries is bad for the U.S. economy.
Once you’ve said you might negotiate, nobody is going to believe you when you change your mind and say you’ll never negotiate.
The policy is absurd. It’s also an extension of Trump’s chaotic personality.
Instead of leading to reduced trade barriers, the new global tariff plan is all but guaranteed to raise them.
Authoritarian leaders are most dangerous when they’re popular. Wrecking the economy is unlikely to broaden Trump’s support.
QAnon for tariffs
For the first time in decades, America has a chance to define its next political order. Trump offers fear, retribution, and scarcity. Liberals can stand for abundance.
Donald Trump’s allies have pivoted from denying that his tariffs will hurt consumers to insisting that consumers should welcome the pain.
The tariffs are real, and they are spectacularly foolish.
Protective tariffs risk triggering a cycle of escalation that ends well for no one.
Unemployment is low, but workers aren’t quitting and businesses aren’t hiring. What’s going on?
The president isn’t trying to engineer prosperity for Americans. He’s seeking power for himself.
Despite ever-higher sticker prices, the real cost of getting a degree has been going down.
No matter who wins in November, the digital-asset market could be on the brink of a deregulation-fueled bonanza.
His allies now claim that he wouldn’t really impose massive global tariffs if elected. But the uncertainty created by threats is bad enough.
Mike Solana, a Peter Thiel protégé, has made his Pirate Wires newsletter a must-read among the anti-woke investor class—and a window into what the most powerful people in tech really think.
In many domains, the conventional wisdom among progressives is mistaken, oversimplified, or based on wishful thinking. The economics of immigration is not one of them.
Many of America’s corporate executives have had enough of the remote-work experiment.
Eliminating degree requirements for jobs is very popular with voters but would do almost nothing to help workers who don’t have a college diploma.