• katy ✨
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    464 days ago

    he really is the dumbest motherfucker on the planet

    • Echo Dot
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      44 days ago

      Every time somebody says this it always makes me think of the scientist from the expanse.

      We should definitely release those files it would be really helpful.

  • @[email protected]
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    53 days ago

    Not Nvidia and not Apple. That’s so ridiculous. It will just increase the price of any electronics devices.

  • @[email protected]
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    464 days ago

    Conservatives are 100% onboard with a felon rapist pedo skyrocketing our cost of living while destroying our global reputation.

    If anyone is still unsure if conservatives are traitors to our nation, now is the time to pinch yourself and wake up.

    • @[email protected]
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      84 days ago

      I wouldn’t call them traitors but they do embody everything else that makes a person horrible! If you’re a republican I seriously hope you get bad allergi s diarrhea and stuck in traffic at the same time, no sun if your car windows get stuck up too.

      • Log in | Sign up
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        124 days ago

        Traitors to the constitution, traitors to democracy, traitors to free and fair elections, traitors to the founding fathers, traitors to the people and even traitors to the union and the flag. What were you waiting for them to betray before you call them traitors?

  • @[email protected]
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    2295 days ago

    What’s interesting about this is that Ghislaine Maxwell just got a transfer to a cushy facility in exchange for what is likely to be heavily coached testimony about how Donald Trump totally didn’t rape children.

    • DominusOfMegadeus
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      765 days ago

      My hope is that he signs the pardon before she testifies, and then she burns him down on the stand.

      • @[email protected]
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        475 days ago

        As if she would… She will just do what she do best, just not for Epstein, but for mr president himself, I fear…

      • @[email protected]
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        315 days ago

        Why would he pardon her? Prison is sheer hell and she got a huge upgrade. Fuck around and they can take that back. They got all the leverage they need without the screams of outrage a pardon would bring.

        • @[email protected]
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          144 days ago

          offtopic: Maybe that’s why a transparent and safe prison system, a bit like what Norway has, would do well for USA. Don’t tell me anything about feeding criminals in luxury, because you are spending far more taxpayer money on far more idiotic things. Also rehabilitation is really a big thing.

            • @[email protected]
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              34 days ago

              It’s usually considered smart to avoid hard problems.

              Thus to say that every criminal deserves rehabilitation. You won’t achieve anything good from taking it from them anyway.

              • @[email protected]
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                14 days ago

                Well we shouldn’t be letting them back out so rehabilitation is pointless and impossible anyway. If you can’t understand that fucking kids is bad without being institutionalized you’re a lost cause

                • @[email protected]
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                  24 days ago

                  There’s plenty of context, the best is that nobody has the moral right to punish others.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 days ago

          Prison really is not that bad - especially federal prison. It’s boring but if you are poor, so is regular life. Don’t pay rent, don’t pay for health care, get 3 square meals that are about as shitty as shelter food. The gang violence stuff is pretty easy to avoid overall - again, especially in federal prison. State prisons are crappier in most states.

          • Obinice
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            95 days ago

            How much prison time have you served in state and federal prisons, if I may ask?

            Forgive me for asking, it’s just to judge how much direct experience you have with what you’re claiming to be knowledgeable on.

            There are sadly a lot of people in the Internet who would say such things without ever having actually experienced them firsthand, and it’s important we educate ourselves on the difference. Thanks!

            • @[email protected]
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              105 days ago

              Not going to go into to detail as this is a public forum but I have years of experience, yes.

            • @[email protected]
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              35 days ago

              I think calling it “hell” is a bit silly. It’s only hell if you are a loud mouth idiot who can’t stop getting into drama. Is being out with a good job better, yes. But TV and the news dramatize it drastically. You basically sit around and read / watch TV most of the time in medium security. I think most people would be surprised how much less terrible it is than it’s hyped to be. If I had to choose prison or being incredibly poor / homeless - I’d choose prison.

    • @[email protected]
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      275 days ago

      I read those news in a way that she’s now in a low risk facility with plenty of other people around who might casually remove a witness, rather than stuck in isolation in a max security prison where every ‘suicide’ would be met with public outrage.

    • Martin
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      23 days ago

      Tariffs are paid by the importer so it will just make your feeds more expensive to import to your device.

        • Martin
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          23 days ago

          I was joking too. 😅

          If anyone hasn’t learned how tariffs work by now, they are choosing to be ignorant.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 days ago

      Well that’s entirely the posters fault.
      They’re really fanatic in wanting to post every stupid thing he says or does (which is daily).
      As if there isn’t any real news out there.

  • @[email protected]
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    785 days ago

    All the dangers they tell us about being over weight and eating like shit, and this mother fucker is still clinging to life like an 80s action hero clings to the underside of a helicopter at the climax of the movie. Come on clogged arteries, do something!

    • ☂️-
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      44 days ago

      i mean, he probably has access to world-class healthcare.

      one also has to wonder how often he uses that healthcare without public disclosure.

    • @[email protected]
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      125 days ago

      The truth is most human maladies are combination of environment and viruses. The two thing our current administration refuses to do anything about.

  • @[email protected]
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    164 days ago

    It’s simultaneously a grift and a way to impose a flat sales tax all in one package.

    1. Republicans have been creaming their pants for years at the thought of imposing a regressive flat tax on all sales while doing away with income based taxation. This would forever shift the majority of the tax burden to the poor and middle class. Which is why we see Trump cutting taxes on the wealthy with his Big Ugly Bill and imposing a tariff as a way to tax the unwashed masses while simultaneously claiming he isn’t. Hopefully the courts strike down his power grab and force Congress to vote on Tariffs. The weasels will probably give it to them but at least we get to see Republicans go on record as voting for a tax increase.

    2. Trump has announced or will announce tariff exemptions that benefit large companies that have donated to him. Sometime later if he feels he needs more money he will announce a higher random tariff on the exempted goods and shake these corps down for more money/favors. All the while he can claim he is doing our industry a favor.

    Never forget Trump is a grifting piece of shit who will always stick it to the little guy.

    • @[email protected]
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      144 days ago

      America in a few years when no one wants their goods anymore and every country outside the US ramped up production since US is the most unreliable partner ever.

      shocked pikachu face

      • Echo Dot
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        34 days ago

        Does the US actually have any domestic manufacturing of anything other than basic commodity products?

        There is that YouTuber who’s trying to make a pan scrubber something in the US, and he’s finding it really difficult to be able to find manufacturers for the various components.

  • partial_accumen
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    485 days ago

    Wouldn’t this only affect goods manufactured in the USA? If a finished product containing chips from say, Europe, were to land on USA shores it would only have a 15% tariff right?

    Why does trump hate American manufacturing?

    • @[email protected]
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      5 days ago

      It’s a tax of 100% on chips being imported to the USA, having been manufactured elsewhere. The idea is that it should force companies to set up their own chip manufacturing in the USA. But that’s expensive and slow to do, and requires a lot of specialized engineering talent, so US-based electronics companies will somehow have to survive through years of paying twice as much for the chips they build into their products. This will mean significant price increases for Americans buying electronics, as the unavoidable costs are passed on.

      • @[email protected]
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        5 days ago

        Expecting companies to build their own chip foundries and manufacture their own chips to avoid tariffs is as unrealistic as expecting poor people to singlehandedly use nuclear fission to create atoms from nothing to materialize into existence all the food they can’t afford. Even if these American “use AI for everything” megacorp regimes that can’t even write a mouse driver that’s under 1gb actually put their big swingin’ dicks back into their pants long enough to actually figure out how they could be efficient enough use the more achievable 90nm and 65nm chips, even that is so unachievable they’d never find a way to mass produce them affordably. Russia supposedly managed to diy their own 350nm chips which is barely even mid 90s Pentium 1 era bullshit and even that’s probably fake propaganda that, best case, followed some half successful low volume experiments in a lab.

        The only purpose of this is to cause mass calamity and force people further into poverty while corporations have an excuse to make everything even more expensive without giving anything back to society in return.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 days ago

          From that article:

          The comments were Trump’s strongest criticism of the bipartisan CHIPS Act to date. “We don’t have to give them money,” Trump said, suggesting that avoiding new tariffs would be enough to convince them to build U.S. factories.

          I think that, insofar as Trump has a coherent view, that’s it: he doesn’t want to give companies money to establish chip manufacturing in the USA, because he thinks it can be done instead by bullying them with tariffs so they are forced to fund it themselves if they want to stay in business.

          I’m not saying that’s a wise view. There’s a good chance he just ends up creating more economic problems at home. And it’s in part driven by his desire to get revenge on Biden by undoing everything he did, rather than a rational appraisal of economics.

    • @[email protected]
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      55 days ago

      I’m guessing the chip in the finished product would be taxed separately, otherwise it would be trivial to dodge the tariff (just package the chip in a different “finished product” and move it to a US-made product).

      • partial_accumen
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        54 days ago

        I’m guessing the chip in the finished product would be taxed separately, otherwise it would be trivial to dodge the tariff (just package the chip in a different “finished product” and move it to a US-made product).

        You’d guess wrong. Welcome to the wonderful world of tariffs and import/export controls!

        I wouldn’t call it a trivial dodge because the act of building the tariffed good into another product takes time and resources at the origin side, then again at the destination side to undo the manufacturing steps. However, sometimes its worth it to a company. There are lots of examples of companies doing exactly this.

        Ford Transit Connect cargo vans were made in Turkey. Ford wanted to import them to the USA. However, there was a tariff placed on vehicles for commercial use, so Ford installed cheap passengers seats in the back and imported them as passenger vehicles. As soon as the vehicles would arrive onshore in the USA, Ford would rip the cheap seats out, and sell them as commercial vehicles.

        • @[email protected]
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          24 days ago

          Do you have examples of individual components being swapped to avoid tariffs?

          For PC parts, it would be very inexpensive to make a cheap mobo, chassis, and UX. E.g., they could put a high end server CPU or something into one of those small handhelds (like Anbernic devices), and then move it to an actual server in the US. Those chips can run more than $1k, while those Anbernic devices tend to run a couple hundred, so the small overhead would absolutely be worth being taxed at 15% instead of 100%.

          Surely regulators have learned from the Ford Transit thing…

          • partial_accumen
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            24 days ago

            Do you have examples of individual components being swapped to avoid tariffs?

            I don’t, but these new tariffs don’t match what we’d had before.

            The closest I can think of is one scheme to avoid aluminum import tariffs. A company cut bar stock into longer lengths and did the cheapest/fastest/worst job of spot welding them together into the shape of a finished good (a chair or table, can’t remember). The “chairs” were imported, then the receiving company simply broken the simple spot welds and fed the again-bar-stock into manufacturing processes.

            For PC parts, it would be very inexpensive to make a cheap mobo, chassis, and UX. E.g., they could put a high end server CPU or something into one of those small handhelds (like Anbernic devices), and then move it to an actual server in the US.

            It would be cheaper, but not inexpensive. This would require setting up an entire manufacturing assembly line to create and assemble the carrier product, and a reciprocal dis-assembly line on the other side to reclaim the desired CPU part. Its doable, but quite a bit of additional expense when the straight non-bypass method is a robot removing a CPU from a tray and inserting it directly into the finished product. Would it be worth it? Potentially yes! That’s why I made my first post here on the topic.

            • @[email protected]
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              14 days ago

              The “chairs” were imported, then the receiving company simply broken the simple spot welds and fed the again-bar-stock into manufacturing processes.

              Lol. That’s basically the same thing as I suggested for PC part swaps.

              Thanks for the example. Let’s see what happens w/ the tariffs and how industry responds, because I highly doubt datacenters would be happy paying 2x for their parts.

    • artyom
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      5 days ago

      Huh? No, it’s the opposite. You should really look up how tariffs work. They drive up prices for goods manufactured outside the US. Local goods are unaffected, giving them a competitive advantage.

      • @[email protected]
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        235 days ago

        I honestly can’t tell if you’re serious. You do know that the vast majority of the chips in all the devices you use are not manufactured in the US? Doubling the prices of the chips imported to manufacture devices here will obviously jack up the prices of those devices

        • artyom
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          95 days ago

          Why wouldn’t I be serious? If they’re manufactured outside the US then they’re obviously not manufactured in the US?

          • trashcan
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            145 days ago

            I believe they’re referring to products made in the USA that contain chips.

            As in importing chips would be 100% but importing a product that contains chips would be 15%?

            • @[email protected]
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              5 days ago

              The real problem seems to be that none of the news articles try to dig into what Trump’s vague and ambiguous wording actually means. They just report his nonsense verbatim. Does “building in the USA” mean building chips or building products containing chips?

            • artyom
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              55 days ago

              The tariffs only apply to the imported products. That’s how tariffs work. If you import components into a US product then you only pay the tariff on those components, not the entire product.

              • arcterus
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                Pretty sure that’s their point. Say a product costs $100 dollars with no tariffs. If you import the product from the EU with a 15% tariff, it’s now $115 with tariffs (assuming no tariffs importing the chips into the EU). If you manufacture the product in the US, you need to pay 100% tariffs for all the chips. Obviously the impact depends on how much the chips cost relative to the entire product, but if the chips are half the cost ($50), then with a 100% tariff you’re now paying $150 for the product manufactured in the US.

                • @[email protected]
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                  35 days ago

                  Surely the tariff would apply separately, so the imported cost would be $157.50 ($50 chip @ 100% tariff + $50 everything else @ 15% tariff).

                  If they didn’t apply separately, the tariff would be trivial to dodge.

                • artyom
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                  15 days ago

                  If you manufacture the product in the US, you need to pay 100% tariffs for all the chips.

                  Incorrect. Once again, tariffs are only for imported products. That’s how tariffs work.

              • trashcan
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                125 days ago

                The tariffs only apply to the imported products. That’s how tariffs work.

                Right.

                If you import components into a US product then you only pay the tariff on those components, not the entire product.

                Isn’t that in agreement with OP? Any products made in USA that contain chips will cost more to make due to the 100% tariff on the chips.

                • artyom
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                  4 days ago

                  Isn’t that in agreement with OP?

                  No, OP said it only applied to US products. It’s applied to all imported products. That’s what a tariff is.

              • @[email protected]
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                75 days ago

                Sounds like you can save 85% by putting some googly eyes on the chip and calling it a finished product. It’s Chippy, the pointy pet that fits in your pocket.

      • @[email protected]
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        65 days ago

        What he means is, if I buy an iPhone built in China, this tariff won’t affect the price I pay.

        But if I buy a phone built in America, with an imported processer, this tariff will make that phone more expensive.

        • artyom
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          35 days ago

          Not correct. Once again, tariffs only affect imported goods. If you buy an iPhone built in China (assuming you import to the US) you’re going to pay a tariff on the device.

          If you buy a phone built in America, with Chinese processors, you only pay tariff on the processor.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 days ago

            Right, but this tariff, at least as I understand it, is on chips imported as chips, not on products that contain chips. An iPhone will, of course, be subject to some other damn fool tariff, but not this specific one.

            Of course, my understanding of this specific tariff may be wrong.

              • @[email protected]
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                24 days ago

                That’s generally how tariffs work. A tariff on grain is not a tariff on bread. A tariff on steel is not a tariff on knives. A tariff on cotton is not a tariff on clothing.

                It can be, of course. A tariff can be on steel and items made with steel. But that’s not usually the case, and it’s usually called out as such. Of course, Trump is not what you’d call the most precise communicator in the world, but all we can do is work with what he says.

                • artyom
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                  4 days ago

                  That’s not how tariffs work. You can’t just circumvent them by packaging them differently.

          • @[email protected]
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            65 days ago

            He meant that this is a disincentive to manufacture a phone in the USA.

            Phone built in china: 30% tariff on the total assembled unit (this week is 30% or it changed again?)

            Phone built in USA: 30% tariff on all the components because they’re made in China, 100% tariff on the processor, AND spend 1000% more in assembling the device because finding, training and paying skilled workers is way more expensive

            Maybe there might be an incentive to move production to a country different from China, but the situation changes too wildly. The risk of spend millions to move production to Vietnam to get a lower rate, then a week later Trump gets diarrhea from eating a bahn mi and imposes an immediate 50% tariff as revenge

            • artyom
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              What? Are you putting American chips in these phones manufactured in China? Why would you think they wouldn’t be subjected to the chip tariff?

              If you manufactured it in the USA there are no tariffs. I don’t know why this is so hard to understand. Manufactured in the USA = no tariffs. Manufactured outside the USA = tariffs. It’s really that simple.

              Labor has always been more expensive in the US, that’s why tariffs exist.

              • @[email protected]
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                14 days ago

                there’s a youtube video from “smarter every day” that showed his attempt to make something 100% in the USA.

                The item was just a barbecue scrubber, with just a few components.

                He needed a simple screw… NOBODY made that in the US…

                He needed a simple plastic knob… NOBODY made that in the US (he bought 10k “american” knobs but once arrived there was a MADE IN COSTA RICA sign)

                He wanted to make injection molds in the US… NOBODY did that, he had to find some retired expert to help him.

                So, if you assemble stuff in US, you still need to import EVERYTHING, paying the same tariff and with more expensive labor. Tariffs need to be carefully considered and target a specific item in order to have some positive effect

                • artyom
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                  14 days ago

                  I don’t understand what any of that has to do with this discussion.

              • @[email protected]
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                44 days ago

                The question comes down to whether a phone with a chip in it is subject to the tariff or just raw chips being imported. No one is putting a US chip in it, because US chips don’t exist. The foundries to make them don’t exist.

                If the assembled phone is subject to a “phone” or “general” tariff at 30% and not the 100% chip tariff then it incentivises manufacturing in china vs the US is what I think the OP is saying.

                • artyom
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                  14 days ago

                  Why wouldn’t the tariff apply to chips already in devices? That’s the way its always been discussed.

      • @[email protected]
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        45 days ago

        They increase demand for domestic goods and therefor raise the price of goods that were already more expensive than the imported goods.

        • artyom
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          25 days ago

          Then there are no US products to affect?

            • artyom
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              5 days ago

              I honestly don’t get whatever “it” is. Again, if you don’t understand what a tariff is, it’s very simple to look it up. Don’t take my word for it.

              • @[email protected]
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                105 days ago

                If there is no alternative from US, the price of that product category as whole will rise, ultimately being paid by US citizens, meaning it is just a hidden tax rise 😘

                • artyom
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                  15 days ago

                  I agree but that’s not what we were discussing

                • artyom
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                  Read all of the comments here. I’m not disagreeing that it would drive prices up, I’m disagreeing that there would be tariffs on American products, because that’s not how tariffs work.

      • candyman337
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        55 days ago

        So you’re an AI right? Like no real person would believe this

        • artyom
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          45 days ago

          WTF are you talking about? Did you not go to elementary school?

          • trashcan
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            65 days ago

            I feel like there must be a miscommunication/misunderstanding here.

            • @[email protected]
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              35 days ago

              No, they’re trolling. There’s zero chance this was explained this many times and they’re still fighting like they don’t understand what is being said

              • artyom
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                15 days ago

                “Trolling” = discussing facts? You are the one who doesn’t understand. It’s very simple: US tariffs do not apply to US products.

                • @[email protected]
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                  12 days ago

                  This was a few days ago but wasn’t it the case that imported chips to be used in American products would be tariffed at the time of import? Why wouldn’t that be the case?

              • trashcan
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                24 days ago

                I think they assume that a USA device would have tariff only on the imported chips inside, whereas a device from another country would have its chips tariffed, as well as an additional tariff on the full device when imported.

                I don’t know if this is the case or not because Trump is unclear and as others have pointed out this would be trivial to evade if components aren’t tariffed separately.

                No matter what those in the USA would be paying more for electronics.

    • @[email protected]
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      25 days ago

      The existing tariffs somehow exclude chips or phones/computers with chips in them. This would be a separate category, like metals.

  • @[email protected]
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    935 days ago

    It’s fucking tariff roulette again. And so it will be for the next 3.5 years. Stupid cunts. Remember to kick a republican in the nuts.

      • snooggums
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        545 days ago

        The last 6 months have been the longest decade of my life.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 days ago

        Luck is also a component in how long Trump lives ; though he’s not that old.

        OK, I’ll say it differently - luck is also a component in how long Putin lives, and that’s likely less. When he dies, there’s gonna be change. In USA too. In Russia - maybe not for the better immediately, but that will be a power transfer, which hasn’t happened since 1999. Even if to someone of his daughters.

        I don’t subscribe to any of stupid theories of “Kremlin towers’ balance”, “businessmen vs patriots” and such, but the point stands, and the previous power transfer, from Yeltsin to Putin, despite them being the same faction, changed a lot and fast.

        Which could mean some of the blackmail material leaking, or the direction of blackmail changing, or other ties being restructured. Which would pull the rug from many of Russia-aligned parties in the west, and it would be interesting to see whether Democrats or Republicans are affected more, in case of US, and whether local alt-right parties or the orderly centrists in EU are affected more. The common belief is that it’s the latter in the US and the former in the EU, but I think we’ll be surprised.

        Now, Russia is small compared to other parties, but big enough to make waves in case of such an event.

    • flandish
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      55 days ago

      *capitalist

      they ALL do this. they just market it differently. profits are at record highs and have been for YEARS. while working class people suffer and die.

  • @[email protected]
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    A bit of chip history: Taiwan Semiconductor (the current pseudo-monoply in cutting edge processor making) rose as Taiwan the country transitioned from a dictatorship to democracy.

    They got state funding, and support for thier business as trade opened up. To simplify, it was like a mix of hyper free-trade capitalism and technocratic command economy/socialism no one on either end of political spectrum would like. And it worked! It’s still working.

    The CHIPS act in the US was a baby step in that direction, which (even with Intel’s incredible corporate dysfunction) got me excited.


    …And that is basically the opposite of what Trump is proposing.

    Basically, take away Intel/Micron/IBM subsidies and tax the shit out of their existing overseas business. And deregulate them instead of directing them.

    In other words, drain their capital, and give them free reign to think short term as their manufacturing circles the drain.

    To be fair to Trump, most business people do not grasp how indescribably capital/research intense processor manufacturing is. Investment is in the many billions, planning takes decades and is extremely technical, and dependent on economic and research forecasts. They have to be forced to think long term, given truckloads of cash to do it, and not get derailed by quarterly earnings targets and cutting long-term projects on the vine for quick cash.

    But still… this is like the worst thing he could have done, IMO.

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        34 days ago

        Biden did a lot of great stuff but the USA would rather live in a reality TV show from hell while marching towards authoritarianism apparently. Oh wait, they don’t understand any of that shit because half of them can’t fucking read.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 days ago

      Yes, we all know the most successful economic endeavors are funded by taxpayers. Then leeches come in to steal the profits from the public and useful idiots are all-to-proud to support them.

      Just look at how Iceland has the cheapest electricity on the planet; it’s because they built their infrastructure using public money without an incentive to maximize profit.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 days ago

        That’s not what I’m implying.

        TSMC would not have thrived if it was purely nationalized, and could have easily collapsed into capitalist hell.

        For the processor fab business, specifically, the ideal conditions seem to be some kind of bastardized hybrid. Samsung and China Semi are not far from ‘hybrids’ either, while the corpses of pure extremes (GloFo, Intel, the Soviet’s and modern Russia’s computing efforts, DARPA projects, other pure government efforts and some RISC ones) are littered everywhere.

        Intel was heading towards a state-supported hybrid, but apparently not anymore (and is now barreling into capitalist collapse).

        The other part of what I’m saying is this does not necessarily apply to, say, the hotel business like Trump is channeling, where short term maneuvering and branding pay off more. Nor engergy generation, which is different too (and probably should be nationalized in such a geothermal-heavy place like Iceland).

        • Log in | Sign up
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          4 days ago

          In which nation is energy generation not using vast natural resources at huge initial outlay where companies have a boner for monopolising or cartels and exploiting scarcity to drive up prices?

          Side note: DARPA’s TCP/IP networky thing seems to have had some future in it!

    • Galactose
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      64 days ago

      It’s not that bad, you go to Youtube & look up your local Indian mathematician

    • Echo Dot
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      14 days ago

      I still have a Texas instrument scientific calculator. I have never found a calculator app that I like better.

      Put of course I was actually allowed to bring it into an exam which would definitely not possible with a phone.