Trump’s $1.1 Billion Tax Hike on Toys and Games

“”The U.S. is our least trustworthy trading partner right now—and I say that as an American,” Price Johnson, COO of Cephalofair Games, told Reason last month. “I can’t trust what the policy is going to be tomorrow, let alone next week.”

The Yale Budget Lab estimates that Trump’s tariffs will cost the average American household around $1,700 this year.”

https://reason.com/2025/11/28/trumps-1-1-billion-tax-hike-on-toys-and-games/

Why Politicians Are Launching Podcasts Ahead of 2028

New York City is way too expensive. It is unaffordable by any hungry person who doesn’t already have a lot of money or parents who will pay for them to live in New York. Even people who make good money have trouble flourishing in New York because basic things are too expensive.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccaxz2y2ZvE

The Savings Expert: The Truth About America Collapsing! The Cost Of Living Is About To Skyrocket!

After WWII, the other manufacturing centers of the world were rebuilding from the war, leaving the U.S. as a manufacturing superpower. Post-war Americans had pent up demand and bought lots of goods. This allowed U.S. manufacturing to flourish. Later, those countries rebuilt and third world countries developed manufacturing. Allowing low-value manufacturing to be done in places like China allowed the U.S. to invest the money made into high-value things. Now, manufacturing is highly automated, so if low-value manufacturing returned, it would make everything more expensive and not bring many jobs because manufacturing doesn’t require many laborers.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxu37dqVR90

Move over, Austin: Denver rents are falling at one of the fastest rates in the country

“The relief comes after a construction boom added tens of thousands of new units to the metro area last year alone, largely in its urban core. Builders rushed to Denver to meet demand from a population boom before and during the pandemic and are now completing them as growth has slowed.

“Everybody that wanted to move here because of remote work has moved here,” said Brian Sanchez, chief executive officer of Denver Apartment Finders, a locator service. “The demand is not keeping up with the supply.”

Between 2010 and 2020, the Denver region grew by more than 16% to nearly 3 million people. Since 2020, its growth has slowed to about 1% annually.

Rents for apartments of up to two bedrooms in the Denver metro area dropped 5.9% last year, according to Realtor.com. That’s a faster decrease than several other onetime hotspots for pandemic-era migration and construction, like Austin and Nashville. There, rents fell 5% and 4.4%, respectively in 2024.”

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/move-over-austin-denver-rents-are-falling-at-one-of-the-fastest-rates-in-the-country-131643629.html