• rekabis@programming.dev
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    18 hours ago

    Why else do Republicans love to defund education? Conservatism requires people to be ignorant about reality in order to have any chance at succeeding.

  • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    If you’re Republican it’s simple:

    1. A tariff is Trump’s special magic that saves you from foreigners and wokeness, and MexiCanada pays for it.
    2. Stuff costs more at the store because the Biden Crime Family hurt the economy so bad, not even Trump can fix it right away. In fact it might even take more than 4 years, so we better keep him in office forever.
    • arrow74@lemm.ee
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      21 hours ago

      I don’t think he’ll live more than 4 years anyway. Hopefully the movement collapses when he does

      • aceshigh@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        The r’s are going to replace one clown with another. Approval isn’t necessary if you’re a dictator.

      • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        I’m really looking forward to the turmoil in the Trumpublican Party after he’s had his final Big Mac Attack. All the opportunists who’ve been using MAGA to advance themselves will be vying for position and clawing each other to pieces like the rats they are.

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      If you’re a republican at this point you’re one of two classes:

      1. Elite, business owner, capitalist. Out for yourself and with enough money and resources and support to do what you want and evade hardships with ease while blaming people below you for their own problems. These are the people who know that if the system changes, they will lose their benefits and comforts and have every motivation in the world to keep pushing right-wing ideology even if they don’t actually believe in it on some level. They have the luxury of not actually caring.

      2. One of the people below the elite who work two or more jobs or can’t get ahead no matter what they do because the system is designed to keep the poor where they are and keep filtering the wealth upwards. These are the people without the time or education to learn why their lives are trash, and manage to watch 30 minutes of FOX or OAN news clips on facebook every Sunday night before bed so they truly, honestly believe that immigration and trans people are the source of all their problems and genuinely don’t understand why the good guys aren’t doing something about all the bad guys, because this is the extent of their mental strength.

      • Devmapall@lemm.ee
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        19 hours ago

        In truth I’d bet most of these people in numbers 2 are watching this stuff on their phones far more often than 30 minutes on Sunday night.

        The wildest stuff comes up on my coworkers and acquaintances apps while scrolling. Like they’ll be watching a cooking video then scroll down and a video about why this trans woman is the devil shows up. Usually they’ll scroll right by but it’s a constant stream of hate/disinformation on top of the usual low quality click bait.

  • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    The whole thing was very purposefully talked about using the word “tariff” and never ever its synonym “import tax” exactly so that the traditional Fascist technique of redefining the meaning of words could be easily used: if all the Fascists’ speech had been about “import taxes” they would not have been able to leverage most people’s ignorance anywhere near this level because the very words “import” and “tax” were already reasonably well understood by most - unlike “tariff” - so the opinion makers would not have been able to miseducate their targets anywhere as easily.

    I’m not saying that the people who fell for this are to be excused - if there is something important enough for you to put the effort into educating yourself, it’s Politics - I’m saying it’s understandable how so many were so easy to swindle.

  • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Of course the employee is wrong, but the OOP isn’t tackling the argument in a really productive way. There’s an opportunity to meet the employee where they are.

    People caught in the right wing noise machine always seem to understand that businesses pass on business taxes to the consumer. So, if other countries were paying the tariffs, why wouldn’t they pass those costs on?

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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      1 day ago

      Yeah, whenever people say “the other country pays” (well, before this election cycle) what they meant was that the higher price would encourage shoppers to buy domestic this the other country “pays” because they get less revenue. Prices would go up either way though because of the domestic goods were cheaper they would’ve already been the first pick. The thing about taxes is that it doesn’t really matter if it’s placed on the supply or demand side, the end effect is the same. Sure, it will feel different and there might be different short term effects, but it’s the same regardless. The price is higher and government gets a cut.

      So I don’t really understand why people believe that even if the foreign country/company was paying the tariff why people would think prices stay the same. As if other countries are just going to get a 25% fee and not increase prices by ~25% to cover that.

      • JuxtaposedJaguar@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        The most charitable argument for Trump would be that foreign businesses reduce their prices such that the price paid by their US customers is the same as before the tariffs to remain competitive in the US market, but I think most MAGAs literally just never thought about it.

    • OutlierBlue@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      I get what you’re saying but you’re reinforcing the belief that other countries are paying the tariffs. They’re not paying anything. A tariff is a direct tax on anyone importing products into the country.

      • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        I’m not reinforcing anything. I’m saying bypass that part entirely, and use the conservative talking points against taxes to discuss this. That the end consumer is ultimately the one that pays, no matter what.

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      Did you read the post? It sounds like they explained it thoroughly to them prior to the tariffs going into effect and it went in one ear and out the other.

      • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        I read the post. I understood the post. Did you understand what I said?

        You can be perfectly correct, or you can reach people who reject reality. You gotta decide on your goals, and understand that peacocking on the Internet isn’t useful.

        • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          You gotta decide on your goals, and understand that peacocking on the Internet isn’t useful.

          Is that what I did?

  • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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    21 hours ago

    Ive never been opposed to learning through experience rather than what others tell you. Dont trust anything you can’t verify yourself.

  • The_Caretaker@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    God damn! This is so simple a third grade student can understand it. The US government has no authority to tax foreign governments, citizens or businesses. They can only tax American citizens and businesses. So Trump puts a 50% tariff (Import Tax) on tea from England. The tea costs $5.00. The person or corporation who imports it, pays the $5.00 cost plus the $2.50 tariff. The US government gets the $2.50. In this case, Trump and Musk are probably just stealing it.

    • NicoleFromToronto@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      You forgot that the tea now costs $7.50 which is paid by the consumer. The tea company sure as shit isnt taking a 50% loss to sell tea now. So the american consumer pays the tariff. Shitler and goebbels pocket the 25% that comes out of an american workers paycheck.

      • phar@lemmy.ml
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        11 hours ago

        Even worse. The company selling it needs to meet percentage profit margins. So before when they paid $5 and charge 50% markup, it was 7.50. Now that it is $7.50 cost, they don’t charge $10, they charge $11.25.

  • nul9o9@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Or, we can hold the fucking media accountable for telling blatant lies about the impacts of tariffs.

  • Ghyste@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    The OP is battling against what Faux Newz, Dipshit Donnie, and other right-wing propagandist shitrags are telling his employee, all which the employee takes as indesputable truth. If he can override that much brainwashing he can convince anyone of anything.

    • Sixty@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      But the guys in OP, they don’t turn on daddy Trump. It can’t be that they were lied to, then they’d have to do something alien to them like introspection. No, it must be…an honest mistake? Honestly have no idea how they’d justify it internally.

      • Seleni@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Because to these people, being ‘bad’ isn’t something you do, it’s something you are. You may thank certain types of Christianity for this nonsense.

        So the thinking goes something like: ‘I’m a Good Person. And as a Good Person, I only vote for/support Good People, because I am Good. So the people I voted for are Good, because only a Bad Person would vote for Bad People, and I’m not Bad, I’m Good. So Trump can’t be Bad; he must have just made a mistake.’

        This is also why they favor punitive jailing instead of trying to reform criminals; criminals are Bad, and so they will always do Bad Things. It’s also why they do stuff like try to get rid of abortion. If a woman got pregnant from ‘sleeping around’ then she’s a Bad Person and deserves to be punished by carrying the child to term.

  • pyre@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    didn’t understand why he was told the other countries pay the tariffs

    that’s easy: you were willing to vote for a guy who lied over 30 thousand times in his first term so he realized you’re a fucking idiot and he could say anything without you thinking even half a second about it.

    WHAT’S THE POINT OF EXPORTING SHIT YOU IDIOT WHY WOULD A COUNTRY DO IT IF THEY HAD TO PAY FOR IT

    • perviouslyiner@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Especially when tariffs go above 100%!

      Like, do you believe French companies would be paying the shipping costs to give you free Champagne?

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      The real Russian plot we’ve all missed completely has far, far less to do with paying Trump to sell them documents. That’s the 2-dimensional public face of a cold-war that never ended and has been devastatingly effective against the USA.

      The real Russian attack that we may never fully comprehend is exactly what they’ve done in other countries that they’ve subsequently annexed, which is making the general population stop caring about what’s true or not. It’s frighteningly easy to poison the well of public knowledge. You simply pour funding into efforts to boost BOTH SIDES of every social issue. When social debates and your nation’s interests are ramped up and the rhetoric gets more and more extreme on both sides of an issue, when every story on both sides becomes suspect, people simply tune out or stop caring about what’s true or not, and this is exactly where we are. Most people are more willing to just throw their arms up and go find a distraction than try to sift through what’s real or not.

      It was even easier to pull off in the USA than anywhere else because we have a built-in policy of fierce independence and individuality. We don’t have communities around us, we don’t have social circles that will make us want to step up our game, we don’t have groups of people we care about telling us we’re wrong, we don’t have help from anywhere but inside our own heads. And if you’ve never been taught how your own thoughts can be wrong, if you’ve been fed the “special birthday boy” narrative for so long that you think highly of yourself, truth will seem toxic and poison because it will tell you things about yourself that will hurt. We don’t seek out pain as a species, we use pain a signal to avoid a thing.

      You can google “KGB tactics for destabilizing nations” and spend weeks reading about what’s being done to us right now. But most people who read my message here will immediately feel that sneaking doubt or words of caution because “how do we even know what’s real anymore.”

    • qarbone@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      They willing pay the extra funbucks tariff monies for the privilege and honor of shipping it to America (at cost) on a chance some red-hatted half-wit will waste it.

    • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      WHAT’S THE POINT OF EXPORTING SHIT YOU IDIOT WHY WOULD A COUNTRY DO IT IF THEY HAD TO PAY FOR IT

      Yeah this is grade school level reasoning telling you that it obviously doesn’t work that way.

      A country’s aluminum exports for example aren’t extra aluminum they want to get rid of because it’s junking up their basements and America is 1800-got-junk taking it off their hands at cost. It’s a fucking series of material production companies in a different country. They too are based on capitalism and they too require profits in order to function.

  • adarza@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    and every one of the millions who wereare just as dumb, will forget the lessons learned well before the next election and vote for it all over again.

  • DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    Delete Elon and Trump from existence and nothing will get better.

    Why?

    Because Americans are dumb as fuck and they’ll still be dumb as fuck when and if those two are gone.

    I’m old enough to have seen the same pattern multiple times. Republican leadership fails spectacularly, even pissing off many conservatives in the process. But as soon as the next cycle begins, those conservatives are back onboard voting for the absolute shittiest candidates.

    Because to them an actual, literal dictator is better than a Democrat as president.

    Our society is circling the toilet and it almost certainly won’t get better within our lifetimes. Prepare yourselves for that.

    • aceshigh@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      It took Rome 1000 years to collapse. I expect instability in the us for the rest of my lifetime. I’m struggling to balance that reality and also living my life.

      Also- I think COVID is to blame too. More people started living from the survival mindset and actually getting sick impacted their brain. Dictatorships help people feel safe.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        It took Rome 1000 years to collapse.

        I mean, if you want to get extra snarky, Rome’s still there. Still one of the wealthiest cities on earth, to this day. The infrastructure is what makes the city and that can be repaired or rebuilt, improved even, as generations come to their senses.

        More people started living from the survival mindset and actually getting sick impacted their brain. Dictatorships help people feel safe.

        I pin this far more on the toxic media atmosphere than COVID, although the pandemic definitely took its toll. That said, the current hysteria around migrants and Woke feels a lot more like the post-9/11 moment than COVID. Democrats rolling over sheepishly while a Republican wields unitary executive power to disappear dissidents and intimidate

        What folks on here don’t want to accept is that this isn’t the first time we’ve had a President behave like this. Its not even the first time in our lifetimes (for the most part - sorry teenagers). This is more normal than not, in fact. Reagan’s War on Drugs, Nixon’s War on Crime, Eisenhower’s Red Scare, and FDR/Truman’s Japanese Internment echoed all the same fascist tendencies.

        What’s really changed in 2025 is the abysmal long term economic outlook. Liberals in 1984 could duck their heads and glare at the rampant poverty around them and mutter “If those hippie slackers had earned an education rather than smoking dope and fucking around, they wouldn’t get picked on by the police”. But now… fucking kids at Columbia University are being targeted. Surgeons are getting targeted. Judges are getting targeted.

        Literally the only thing you can do to avoid these purges is Be MAGA. And “Just be MAGA, you won’t get hurt” isn’t something liberals can quite bring themselves to do yet (although keep an eye on Gavin Newsom and Richie Torries and Andrew Cuomo, because its coming).

        Dictatorship isn’t making people feel safe. It’s making them feel terrified and helpless.

        • aceshigh@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          The city of Rome still exists but the Roman Empire does not. That is the long term future of the us.

          The brain drain is necessary for the dictatorship to fully take over. Just like in Russia, I also expect people to eventually have to play along - or lose their job, house etc.

          Dictatorship only scares the non maga. Maga feels safer with it.

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            1 hour ago

            The city of Rome still exists but the Roman Empire does not.

            Absent that brief ill-conceived stint at empire under Mussolini, sure. But the roadways and the ports and the political connections and the religious iconography that centered Rome within the ancient world continue to persist. It isn’t the center of a sprawling intercontinental kingdom, but it holds a privileged place within the modern sprawling intercontinental kingdom of NATO.

            Just like in Russia, I also expect people to eventually have to play along - or lose their job, house etc.

            Russia’s in a peculiar place precisely because brain drain and privatization and punitive sanctions and the latest round of pointless horrifying bloodshed has sapped it of so many talented and driven young people. But the dictatorship - the bourgeois dictatorship, anyway - came under Yeltsin, following the Gorbachev coup. It brought in an entirely illegal dismantling of public industry and services, a looting of pensions and public reserves, and a fire sale of military hardware which set off a wave of ugly overseas wars in Africa, Oceania, and Latin America.

            Only after the country had been hollowed out economically, by a cartel of untouchable oligarchs, did the public warm to the idea of a new singular strongman dictator. And the call for dictatorship was, at its heart, a plea for someone to drag the cartels back into line as part of a national project.

            People have to play along in every system, because we’re not self-sustaining little monoids. We are hugely interdependent and most efficient when we are working together in concert as collaborative specialists. What we’re searching for is leadership. But all we seem to be offered is different flavors of oligarchy or autocracy.

    • phx@lemmy.ca
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      20 hours ago

      I actually don’t consider this an issue of being dumb. It IS an issue with being under-educated (often deliberately in R states) and fed a ton of propaganda

      • ploot@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        19 hours ago

        There’s ignorance and there’s stupidity. Stupidity will stubbornly resist any attempt to correct its ignorance.

        Stupidity is a more dangerous enemy of the good than malice. One may protest against evil; it can be exposed and, if need be, prevented by use of force. Evil always carries within itself the germ of its own subversion in that it leaves behind in human beings at least a sense of unease.

        Against stupidity we are defenseless.

        Neither protests nor the use of force accomplish anything here; reasons fall on deaf ears; facts that contradict one’s prejudgment simply need not be believed — in such moments the stupid person even becomes critical — and when facts are irrefutable, they are just pushed aside as inconsequential, as incidental. In all this the stupid person, in contrast to the malicious one, is utterly self-satisfied and, being easily irritated, becomes dangerous by going on the attack.

        For that reason, greater caution is called for than with a malicious one. Never again will we try to persuade the stupid person with reasons, for it is senseless and dangerous.

        If we want to know how to get the better of stupidity, we must seek to understand its nature. This much is certain, that it is in essence not an intellectual defect but a human one. There are human beings who are of remarkably agile intellect yet stupid, and others who are intellectually quite dull yet anything but stupid.

        Dietrich Bonhoeffer

        • phx@lemmy.ca
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          17 hours ago

          That’s willful ignorance. While the willfully ignorant can be stupid (lack of intelligence) more often it seems to be due to arrogance and/or just being an asshole in general

    • T156@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      They’re symptoms, not the problem. Even if they were vanished from existing by will of a djinni or something, another would just take their place.

  • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    23 hours ago

    Even if it were a tax paid by foreign companies, what difference does it make? They would just increase the prices the goods are sold at.

    So, lets say, a smartphone that is priced at $1000:

    With the 20% tariff in place:

    If the Chinese conpanies pay the $200 per device, they just sell each phone at $1200 to the US importer.

    If the US importers pay the $200 per device, similarily, they would tack on the $200 (on top of the usual markups), making it $1200 per phone.

    There is zero difference, the end consumer always foots the bill.

    This is so simple to understand, how are people this stupid

    • merdaverse@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      Not necessarily: the company can choose to absorb part or all the tariff, since the demand would drop at the higher price anyway, and they might make more overall profit at a lower margin per item. But generally yes, most of the cost will be passed on to the consumer and prices will increase on average.

      Example:

    • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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      The difference is that this way it’s much easier to calculate prices.

      If the tax were 20%, the exporter would have to do the inverse calculation. That is, “which price will result in me gaining $1000?” Which is not 1200, since 20% of 1200 is 240. x = 0.8y -> y = (1/0.8)*x -> y = 1.25x. so the exporter would have to price it at 1.25x the price, $1250. 20% of 1250 is 250.

      So it’s unintuitive that a 20% tax would result in a 25% price increase. That’s my guess why tariffs are applied to the importer instead of exporter.

    • phx@lemmy.ca
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      20 hours ago

      the end consumer always foots the bill.

      Or the consumer can’t/won’t take on the extra burden of cost, and the business loses enough sales to go under.

    • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      22 hours ago

      The only difference would be that money we spent would be going to the companies instead of the government. Tarrifs are a government putting taxes on their people to strangle industries in other countries. In both scenarios we pay the same, but the flow of money is different

    • Sceptiksky@leminal.space
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      4 hours ago

      Wouldn’t refunding the amount of the tariff to the customer fix this? Ignoring the very important diplomatic and retaliation tariffs which makes the whole post unusable for real life

      • Canada sells a product A $100.
      • Tariffs makes it $120 when you buy it
      • so Canada gets $100, USA gets $20, USA customer pays $120.
      • USA has now $20, they can directly refund the customer for $20 via a policy to reduce the price of the category of A.
      • So customer gets $20 reduction of the product A via tax something, so USA now has $0 and USA customer actually paid only $100.
      • Except now if USA company make the product A they can sell it for like $100 and customer pays $80.
      • There is a slight increase of imported goods price here because tariffs cannot actually refund $20, it will be a % of the local vs imported production.
      • Over time you can expect to get a local advantage because of this price inequality, so local companies will be subsidized by imports until imports are no longer significant.

      Where am I wrong here ?

      • Dnb@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 hours ago

        In your scenario how is the local made $100 item bought at $80? Where is a $20 refund paid from? You are double spending it on both imported and local goods

  • JOMusic@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    I wrote a comment explaining Tariffs on a Fox News YouTube video a few weeks back, and the entire reply chain was people arguing with eachother about how tariffs work because “Trump said it’s a tax on other countries, so that’s how they work”

    • immutable@lemm.ee
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      24 hours ago

      It’s the problem that reality is more complicated than the simplified version trump gives his followers.

      If you don’t know how something works and someone very confidently tells you how it works and it sorta maps onto familiar concepts, boy is that catnip.

      Maybe all the countries are just sitting around like people and Canada is like a guy buying our stuff and we are just making that guy pay a tax. I’m a guy, I pay taxes, sucks to be that guy but probably rules to be the guy getting the tax revenue, and now trump made that us, awesome!!!

      Transmitting this wrong idea is fast because it maps onto their lived experiences. It’s easy for them to conceptualize Canada as a single monolithic entity that is buying shit and having to pay a tax. So in one stroke they get a double dopamine hit.

      • I’m not dumb, I get how this all works, and it was pretty easy!
      • we get to collect these taxes instead of having to pay them, awesome!!!

      So here you come to explain, “that’s not how any of this works” Canada isn’t one entity, it’s many. Sure the tariff is on their stuff, but it’s paid by the person buying it, us. And you can go on about all the ways they are wrong but you are threatening the fact that they are not dumb and they already understand this and their understanding means they are winning. So you want them to admit they are dumb and getting fucked and that’s a hard sale.

      This is the real danger of hypernormalization, it allows people like trump to replace the complexity of reality with a fake but simpler version. And it’s so dangerous because the people that buy in to that fake but simpler version have this weird insane incentive to defend it.

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    1 day ago

    I recently learned that almost 1 in 5 Americans are illiterate.

    How many Americans do you think are reasonably well educated, so that they would understand somewhat complex issues like tariffs? Or could seek out information if they didn’t understand?

    • Zen@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      Im still surprised by that , the quality of education in my country is low but holly fuck im stunned by the lack of education in the states

      • Stovetop@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 day ago

        It is highly regional, too.

        Despite the existence of the Department of Education (which Trump is trying to dismantle), there is no national standard for education in the US. In general, each state is free to decide upon its own policies and standards.

        Some states, such as those in the northeast, have very high-performing school systems. So when that “1 in 5 are illiterate” statistic is mentioned (I actually have not verified that number, just quoting the prior claim as an example), it would be caused by low-performing states where the situation is much more dire dragging down the national average.

        Here’s a general look at quality of education in the US by state, though recommend folks look up their own numbers because I haven’t validated the numbers pulled in the article I grabbed this from.

        It’s not a perfect divide between red states and blue states (Florida appears good, California less so, as an example), but in general we see the lower performing states located mainly in the South where the Republicans have more support. Basically, a less educated populace is easier to manipulate.

        • Jaderick@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          I was reading into this recently and the reason Florida is so high on these lists is because post-secondary education is very cheap. Their K-12 education is on the garbage end of the spectrum.

        • AutistoMephisto@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          For extra fun, look into where school districts allocate their funding and how it relates to their rankings. Some of the worst performing public schools spend a lot more on athletics than they spend on anything else. It’s like they want to be professional athlete mills instead of functioning adult mills.

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      Important note - literacy isn’t simply about being able to recognize and pronounce letters and words. A person can sound out every word in English, and understand what each word says, and still be illiterate if they cannot comprehend the message the words express together.

      That’s where this illiteracy arises - it’s a failure of reading comprehension. In this light, I imagine many of us have attempted conversation online with somebody functionally illiterate.

      • homura1650@lemm.ee
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        22 hours ago

        Literacy is also about English (at least as commonly reported in the US). About 1/3 of functionally illiterate adults in the US are foreign born. I have never seen literacy stats that measure “literate in any language”.

        • weremacaque@lemmy.world
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          20 hours ago

          That’s still really bad. If 2/3 of illiterate people were born in America, that really highlights how inconsistent education is in America.

          When I was a kid, I lived in a regular suburban neighborhood but the middle school and high schools that I was zoned for were so awful that my parents enrolled me into a charter school. (The elementary school was fine) Since then, some of the crappy schools in my city are now magnet schools and so my parents’ house appears to be zoned to different schools. There appears to be less public schools now. That’s probably not a good thing.

    • Hozerkiller@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      “Are you saying 1 fouth of Americans are removed?” “Yeah at least 1 fourth.”