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A lumberjack created more than 200 sculptures in Wisconsin's Northwoods

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/when-a-lumberjacks-imagination-ran-wild-he-created-more-than-200-sculptures-in-wisconsins-northwoods-180986840/
4•noleary•16m ago•1 comments

AlphaGenome: AI for better understanding the genome

https://deepmind.google/discover/blog/alphagenome-ai-for-better-understanding-the-genome/
373•i_love_limes•12h ago•110 comments

Launch HN: Issen (YC F24) – Personal AI language tutor

227•mariano54•11h ago•205 comments

The time is right for a DOM templating API

https://justinfagnani.com/2025/06/26/the-time-is-right-for-a-dom-templating-api/
87•mdhb•6h ago•48 comments

Alternative Layout System

https://alternativelayoutsystem.com/scripts/#same-sizer
129•smartmic•6h ago•16 comments

Kea 3.0, our first LTS version

https://www.isc.org/blogs/kea-3-0/
52•conductor•5h ago•20 comments

How much slower is random access, really?

https://samestep.com/blog/random-access/
40•sestep•3d ago•9 comments

Fault Tolerant Llama training

https://pytorch.org/blog/fault-tolerant-llama-training-with-2000-synthetic-failures-every-15-seconds-and-no-checkpoints-on-crusoe-l40s/
28•Mougatine•3d ago•5 comments

Dickinson's Dresses on the Moon

https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2025/06/20/dickinsons-dresses-on-the-moon/
12•Bluestein•3d ago•0 comments

Show HN: Magnitude – Open-source AI browser automation framework

https://github.com/magnitudedev/magnitude
60•anerli•7h ago•25 comments

Snow - Classic Macintosh emulator

https://snowemu.com/
205•ColinWright•17h ago•75 comments

Collections: Nitpicking Gladiator's Iconic Opening Battle, Part I

https://acoup.blog/2025/06/06/collections-nitpicking-gladiators-iconic-opening-battle-part-i/
6•diodorus•3d ago•0 comments

A new pyramid-like shape always lands the same side up

https://www.quantamagazine.org/a-new-pyramid-like-shape-always-lands-the-same-side-up-20250625/
622•robinhouston•1d ago•150 comments

A Review of Aerospike Nozzles: Current Trends in Aerospace Applications

https://www.mdpi.com/2226-4310/12/6/519
68•PaulHoule•10h ago•32 comments

Matrix v1.15

https://matrix.org/blog/2025/06/26/matrix-v1.15-release/
128•todsacerdoti•6h ago•39 comments

Puerto Rico's Solar Microgrids Beat Blackout

https://spectrum.ieee.org/puerto-rico-solar-microgrids
348•ohjeez•1d ago•199 comments

Introducing Gemma 3n

https://developers.googleblog.com/en/introducing-gemma-3n-developer-guide/
288•bundie•9h ago•131 comments

Show HN: I built an AI dataset generator

https://github.com/metabase/dataset-generator
121•matthewhefferon•11h ago•24 comments

SigNoz (YC W21, Open Source Datadog) Is Hiring DevRel Engineers (Remote)(US)

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/signoz/jobs/cPaxcxt-devrel-engineer-remote-us-time-zones
1•pranay01•7h ago

Shifts in diatom and dinoflagellate biomass in the North Atlantic over 6 decades

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0323675
43•PaulHoule•8h ago•2 comments

Thomas Aquinas – The world is divine

https://ralphammer.com/thomas-aquinas-the-world-is-divine/
9•pedroth•3h ago•1 comments

Typr – TUI typing test with a word selection algorithm inspired by keybr

https://github.com/Sakura-sx/typr
40•Sakura-sx•3d ago•29 comments

Starcloud can’t put a data centre in space at $8.2M in one Starship

https://angadh.com/space-data-centers-1
57•angadh•6h ago•71 comments

The Business of Betting on Catastrophe

https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the-business-of-betting-on-catastrophe/
67•anarbadalov•3d ago•31 comments

“My Malformed Bones” – Harry Crews’s Counterlives

https://harpers.org/archive/2025/07/my-malformed-bones-charlie-lee-harry-crews/
9•Caiero•3d ago•0 comments

Lateralized sleeping positions in domestic cats

https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(25)00507-X?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS096098222500507X%3Fshowall%3Dtrue
104•EvgeniyZh•7h ago•50 comments

Memory safety is table stakes

https://www.usenix.org/publications/loginonline/memory-safety-merely-table-stakes
67•comradelion•6h ago•70 comments

Ambient Garden

https://ambient.garden
313•fipar•3d ago•56 comments

Writing a basic Linux device driver when you know nothing about Linux drivers

https://crescentro.se/posts/writing-drivers/
425•sbt567•4d ago•60 comments

Access BMC UART on Supermicro X11SSH

https://github.com/zarhus/zarhusbmc/discussions/3
57•pietrushnic•11h ago•11 comments
Open in hackernews

US economy shrank 0.5% in the first quarter, worse than earlier estimates

https://apnews.com/article/economy-tariffs-trump-gdp-shrink-86d1f15e66c646ac4ce88ffc0a956942
301•Aloisius•6h ago

Comments

Aloisius•6h ago
I'm a bit confused about the bit about the "Imports expanded 37.9%, fastest since 2020, and pushed GDP down by nearly 4.7 percentage points" bit.

Presumably when they calculated GDP previously, they hadn't seen quite as much imports, but had seen higher spending, thus they misattributed some of it to domestic products rather than imports, though I'm a bit confused as to how they underestimated imports given everything is declared. Perhaps some changes in the price index?

Though other articles talk about the expected GDP next quarter being higher because they don't expect a surge of imports to continue, which makes no sense to me unless one assumes spending remains the same with or without imports.

outside1234•6h ago
My theory would be that a lot of companies imported a ton in the first quarter knowing that tariffs were coming.
WaxProlix•6h ago
Sure, but GP's point is that that level of spending likely won't continue now that the (forecasted) demand has been met.
Espressosaurus•6h ago
My company did that. Along with rushed some deliveries that weren't 100% ready to avoid the sudden spike in tariffs.

I also personally did that for expensive gear I was otherwise planning on waiting on. And now I'm not going to be buying that over the next 2-5 years like I was originally planning.

It's a big bolus of spending that will not be replicated in the future.

don_neufeld•5h ago
Yup, did the same, ton of new hardware.

Last week I was looking at a proposal from a supplier that's got a ~8K "tariff" line on it and thinking... y'know, I can wait on that project.

iamtheworstdev•6h ago
stolen from investopedia: The GDP formula is commonly expressed as GDP = C + I + G + (X - M), where C is consumer spending, I is business investment, G is government spending, and (X - M) represents net exports (exports minus imports). This formula helps measure the total economic output of a country during a specific period.

Our tariffs are tampering with the intelligent monitoring of GDP growth. When the USA expanded tariffs to 155% with China it was effectively an embargo, so imports went away (but exports didn't) and our GDP looked amazing. When the tariffs were brought back to previous rates of 55%, companies bought every import they could (or had them released from bonded warehouses) which has pumped the GDP in the other direction. And it'll likely be the same situation next month because Chinese ports are seeing record numbers as US companies try to buy every piece of inventory they can before these tariffs go back up.

axus•5h ago
That seems very strange to me that GDP is the same, when import:export is 4:3 or 3:2, but explains why someone would care more about the difference than the absolute values.
yread•5h ago
If you import something and immediately export it the ratio changes but the difference doesnt
notahacker•5h ago
They're accounting identities, not casual relationships. Exports are stuff that's part of domestic product (but not consumed domestically) so get added. Imports are stuff domestic consumers get the benefit of but aren't actually produced domestically, hence the direction of the signs in the accounting identity. The 4:3 ratio is consistent with an economy which might be more open than a 3:2 one, but it doesn't actually have a higher GDP unless there's higher consumption or investment or government spending as a result of the extra trade.

The key part is that nobody should care about any values or ratios in isolation or impute causality that isn't there. Otherwise people start believing that doing crazy stuff to shrink a trade deficit results in higher GDP, as opposed to lower C+I+G. And when those people are sufficiently stubborn and sufficiently powerful, you get $economy shrank 0.5% in the first quarter headlines...

m-hodges•5h ago
Chris Clarke has a great Short on this: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/UrsRoHmXCug
ginko•5h ago
In a non-terrible format: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrsRoHmXCug
dylan604•4h ago
how is that better? the selected background color is not better than black which is what most players will do when forced to a landscape player
ginko•3h ago
You can pause and forward the video and scrolling doesn’t change to another video.
hayst4ck•5h ago
One of the most upsetting things about our current state of governance is gamed metrics and lack of a national metrics "dashboard."

Metrics are gamed as marketing tools rather than assessment tools. There's a clear conflict of interest in the government presenting the metrics that it says to judge them by.

Unemployment is another gamed metric. If you want to get a sense of unemployment, a graph of % employed tells you more than some gamed number like "unemployment" since "unemployment" is a direct measure of political success.

Consumer spending/GDP are also directly used to measure political success, and a metric like "aggregate Visa/Mastercard purchases" is going to give a much better sense of how much people are spending.

During COVID, all cause mortality is a superior metric than COVID attributed deaths because any death attributed to COVID represented a failure of public health policy. We even saw direct attacks on public health monitoring in Florida.

It seems like the only ways to combat this are either states presenting their own metrics to imply national trends based on their own. I definitely wonder what kind of information we could get that is accurate and not gamed to create our own dashboards. Geohot's use of national energy consumption to estimate national productivity was sharp and the type of thing I wish journalists would do.

rrrrrrrrrrrryan•4h ago
Politicians brag about the U-3 unemployment (that they've gamed), but actual economists look at U-6 (unless they need to do a comparison going back a century, when U-6 didn't yet exist).

During covid politicians bragged about covid attributed deaths, while public health experts were discussing all cause mortality.

This is the case everywhere. Quality metrics are absolutely out there - you just have to give enough of a shit to look at them.

randomNumber7•4h ago
So you are in favor of temporally changing the GDP formula to fit your mindset better?
kasey_junk•3h ago
GDP, consumer spending, unemployment are some of the most inspected numbers in the world. Not only are they rigorously defined and tested by the government and academia there are whole swaths of finance attuned to them.

And no one who uses them seriously doesn’t understand their weaknesses. At a macro level all signals have flaws, knowing what they are and how to deal with them is the whole job of many people.

You can find huge swaths of research comparing and contrasting the ADP number vs the official bls stat but no one serious thinks ADP is _better_ than the the headline unemployment number because it can’t be gamed.

dghlsakjg•3h ago
I don't think you know the space very well. Go to FRED, it is the largest of many that is a fantastic unbiased dashboard of governmental and societal data for the US. They even have almost the exact data that you would say is useful about CC spending. Here is all of the data that they publish about credit cards[1]. It has a lot more data than just the aggregate data from two of the credit card providers.

The people that gather and publish the data are historically pretty unbiased and open about methods. You can go get the raw data and methods. Some of the places that publish them like FRED, are not even under direct political jurisdiction. They are not at all the part of the government that is affected by the data they publish, and being run by a reserve bank puts them at pretty far reach from meddling by DC.

You can't stop politicians from using the data they like most, but don't pretend that ALL of the data isn't available in useful format.

1. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/tags/series?t=credit+cards

TheOtherHobbes•2h ago
It's not the data, it's the media narrative. No one cares if there are detailed breakouts of key economic indicators available somewhere obscure [1] if most people get their opinions from the media, and the media are in the propaganda and marketing business, not the truth-to-power business.

[1] Not media-quoted or foregrounded for the public.

dghlsakjg•1h ago
That's a goal-post shift. GP were complaining that accurate, fulsome statistics aren't there, when they are.

The media narrative is out of the control of the various statistics bodies, and it is up to the informed reader to seek out better sources if the article they are reading has scanty info. For the record though, FRED is frequently cited as a source in reputable mainstream media (I see it in the NYT all the time). Read The Economist some time, that's an international news source that will deeply report on these stats. Can't be helped if people prefer Fox or other garbage as their news diet.

You are complaining about media literacy and bad journalism, which is an entirely separate issue from the fact that the data both exists, and is extremely easy to access.

datavirtue•43m ago
You are supposed to be an adult and ignore all that biased rhetoric.
sillyfluke•1h ago
>being run by a reserve bank puts them at pretty far reach from meddling by DC.

Study the path other autocrats blazed for Trump, who is following and mimicing their tactics pretty closely now. Aggressive Fed interference is on his agenda, as can be seen by the way he likes to keep his fights with Powell constantly in the news cycle.

dghlsakjg•25m ago
Well aware.

At least the few adults that are left, along with the market, start getting very upset when certain politicians target the fed.

protocolture•2h ago
>Metrics are gamed as marketing tools rather than assessment tools.

Macro metrics are marketing tools largely.

In Australia we had a long period of "Lower Taxes" Vs "Lower Taxes (As a proportion of GDP)" The issue being that the latter didnt actually lower taxes, they just spent more money, increasing GDP.

These metrics are helpful sometimes in review. But in terms of targets they suck.

datavirtue•44m ago
The calculations are 100% transparent. Reminds me of the red hat crowd bleeting about how the numbers are "adjusted." Like it's some kind of conspiracy. It's all well known. If you understand it and choose not to like it, well ignore it and cook up your own stat. You can find the formulas and get the data. No secrets.
czhu12•4h ago
From what I understand from Econ 101, this is not true. The only reason you subtract imports is to avoid double counting because presumably the import was done by C, G or I.

The point of subtracting imports is so that it doesn't count as domestic production, and effectively zeros out the portion of C + G + I that was not produced domestically, but thats independent of how much is in exports.

digitalPhonix•4h ago
That’s true (analogy - you can find out how much the clothes you’re wearing weigh by weighing each piece individually or weighing yourself wearing them and subtracting your weight).

But you can’t change the process mid way through your measurement. We don’t have a way of measuring “consumption of domestic products” so we just measure consumption and subtract the imports afterwards.

X-M is an accounting trick, but when you’re using this model you have to stick with it.

The idea that imports were deferred causes this accounting trick to show its weakness. (Presumably, looking at the data for all of 2025 when it’s available will “low pass” the deferred imports)

Aloisius•4h ago
I'm not sure I understand. What process is changing? The "accounting trick" doesn't stop working.

Let's try a very simple example of buying all our inventory in one quarter and selling it in another - what is supposedly behind our GDP woes.

Let's say in Q1, the only spending was on $1 trillion of imports into private inventories, thus: I=$1 trillion, C=$0, G=$0, X=$0, M=$1 trillion. That gives us a GDP of $0.

Next quarter, flush with product there's no need to import anymore and the entire inventory is somehow sold domestically, thus: I=-$1 trillion, C=$1 trillion, G=$0, X=$0, M=$0. That gives us again, a GDP of $0.

Yet articles claim that the GDP in Q2 would be higher due to the drop in imports and was reduced in Q1 due to an increase in imports.

lesuorac•3h ago
Don't you always measure GDP using spending (for convince / accuracy of price) so if you import $1 trillion and don't sell it then the GDP is $-1 trillion?

So Q1 is $-1 trillion and Q2 is $1 trillion?

IIRC, Investment is more of I bought machinery to make socks not I have 100 nintendo switches.

Aloisius•2h ago
I (investment) in the GDP includes changes in private inventory, not just spending on fixed assets, so the 100 nintendo switches should be in there.

That's why in my example Q2 investment goes negative since inventories get depleted when they are sold.

dylan604•4h ago
> (analogy - you can find out how much the clothes you’re wearing weigh by weighing each piece individually or weighing yourself wearing them and subtracting your weight)

damn, my clothes are heavy, because I know how much I weigh.

gowld•4h ago
Quarterly GDP, since it's measured via global approximation, isn't meaningful in quarters when the economy is rapidly changing. The numbers only make sense over time periods where behavior is relatively steady.
Aurornis•2h ago
> The GDP formula is commonly expressed as GDP = C + I + G + (X - M), where C is consumer spending, I is business investment, G is government spending, and (X - M) represents net exports (exports minus imports).

Imports don't actually subtract from GDP. They are subtracted inside the GDP formula to make sure they aren't counted toward the country's production, basically.

Logically it makes sense: If you import something, it was not produced within the country. Therefore you need to make sure it's not counted in GDP. However, the starting values for GDP calculation are sum total type numbers, so you have to manually subtract out imports.

This proves endlessly confusing for journalists and even politicians who see the subtraction sign and conclude that "imports subtract from GDP"

RC_ITR•5h ago
Preamble: GDP, is a bit of a synthetic metric.

As you point out, there's no purchase level data about what's imported vs. not.

The way this is handled is that this quarter's imports are set against this quarter's consumption - basically the method assumes the import/domestic mix of business inventories stays the same (true enough in the long run, very incorrect in short term shocks).

That's why extremely disingenuously the AP says:

>Trade deficits reduce GDP. But that’s just a matter of mathematics. GDP is supposed to count only what’s produced domestically, not stuff that comes in from abroad. So imports — which show up in the GDP report as consumer spending or business investment — have to be subtracted out to keep them from artificially inflating domestic production.

Answer: What happened here[1] is that the BLS makes a bunch of assumptions to get data out in time (preliminary figures based on historical seasonal trends, etc.) but this quarter, their assumptions about consumer spend were far too aggressive.

It happens all the time, especially in strange times like 1Q was, but there's also career/political incentive to be aggressive on the advanced data, since that's what drives the big headlines.

[1]https://www.bea.gov/system/files/gdp1q25-3rd-chart-02.png

jfengel•5h ago
Spending did not keep up; if it had, the net effect on GDP would be zero.

This is companies stocking up, and the items are in inventory. They will sell it over the next quarter or so, at which point the tariffs will really weigh.

cchance•5h ago
I've heard this from a number of buyers for companies, that their companies have hugely held stockpiles, to avoid the tariff uncertainty in hope they get worked out before stockpiles run out... most of the ones i've talked to say its only gonna last a few months before shit really hits the fan
Matticus_Rex•5h ago
In the quoted statement, they're reasoning from an accounting identity because they don't understand the underlying measure. There's a kernel of truth, but it's much more complicated than that.

Imports are subtracted from the GDP calculation, BUT, that's only because they're added in the equation as well as part of consumption/investment/government spending. So to capture only the domestic production, since it's hard to measure consumption/investment/government spending only on domestic inputs, you just measure them overall, add exports, and subtract imports.

So people see that in the equation imports are literally subtracted as a variable, and reason that if imports go up $X, that means GDP literally goes down by that amount. In reality — ignoring for a moment that we sometimes mismeasure consumption/investment/government spending, the net effect in the equation is 0.

ON THE OTHER HAND, in one way part of the GDP drop here is because of imports. It's not something you can cleanly calculate the way journalists often try to, because there's a lot we don't know, but picture this simplified example:

I'm a factory owner, and my factory uses a lot of inputs that we import from China. We normally spend $50k/quarter on investment (maintenance, new machines, etc.). But next quarter my short-term cost of Chinese inputs may double. It may make sense for me to front-load imports ahead of tariffs and defer as much investment as possible. I can't do that forever, so eventually the money will show up in the equation more-or-less where it would have otherwise.

And on top of that, there are a bunch of confounding factors. Over time, imports also make domestic production more efficient, so shifting to less-efficient US inputs (or simply paying the tariff) will slow the rate of overall growth. And some costs are passed on as higher prices, which reduces demand, and therefore reduces growth. And importing goods also means exporting dollars, which affects exchange rates, and therefore affects exports as well. It's all interconnected.

Calling it out when they reason from an accounting identity is really important, because it's a lot of what drives the misconceptions of Trump's protectionist advisors — they use the same reasoning in reverse to say that anything that reduces the trade deficit therefore increases GDP. But that's only true in an accounting sense! Reality takes more complex modeling, and has to account for all the interconnected pieces.

ACow_Adonis•3h ago
See this article: Why do econ journalists keep making this basic mistake.

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/why-do-econ-journalists-keep-m...

Source: am economist, and the writer of the blog is 100% correct.

Reporting and commentary on GDP and economics stats is just generally bad.

Aloisius•2h ago
Thank you. This makes far more sense.
bamboozled•4h ago
“It’s the media’s fault for reporting the numbers accurately” /s
trhway•4h ago
Foundation of US economy is domestic consumption. The current administration has significantly increased taxes - in the form of tariffs - on that consumption. So, the results are and are going to be as expected by any economy textbook.

Additional obvious effect of tariffs is introducing friction, to say the least, into supply chains, similar to how pandemics did at the beginning with about the same result - inflation and loss of productivity.

I personally have no panic here though - during my quarter of century here i noticed that US economy is extremely resilient and can take a lot of hits and damage, can even get knocked down, yet nothing can get it knocked out, and it would always come back even more roaring. It is though very hard on those who gets the sharp end of stick here, i'd wish that the society would get a bit more empathetic to them.

gotoeleven•3h ago
The hope, at least, is that the tariffs will encourage the creation of more, better, jobs in the US through re-shoring. This would, in theory, also increase domestic consumption though the time frame is longer.
trhway•3h ago
>the tariffs will encourage the creation of more, better, jobs in the US through re-shoring

that isn't possible for any production other than a primitive one. The modern production is very complicated, and in particular contains long lists of components, materials, tools, technological stages of production and engineering services. I.e. it is a pyramid with very wide base. Even large country like US is too small to maintain all what is required for any even moderately complicated product. Tariffs are kind of shrinking the pyramid's base - the result is lower pyramid so to speak.

Of course, you and anybody welcome to bring counter-examples.

>This would, in theory, also increase domestic consumption

It would increase prices, and decrease productivity thus resulting in lower consumption.

gotoeleven•1h ago
Dell used to make computers in the US. Then they moved manufacturing to China. You're saying Dell can't make computers in the US ever again? If the economic incentives are there then the supply chains can be (re-)built, right?
myvoiceismypass•1h ago
> You're saying Dell can't make computers in the US ever again?

The person you are replying to said no such thing.

Yes, of course, in isolation, some manufacturers can build new factories. Not overnight. Not in a year, if the supply chain is remotely complicated.

Okay, lets say Dell, who moved their manufacturing out of the US nearly two decades ago, succeeds with their factory building and starts building here. Great! What are they building? Are they fabbing 100% of the components that are going into these computers they are building? Absolutely not.

trhway•1h ago
>then the supply chains can be (re-)built

similar like with networks the value of supply chain grows with its size, ie. more competing suppliers decrease the prices and increase the productivity and efficiency. It also lowers the risks of failing suppliers, and the supply risk is also an additional cost.

So, you suggest to rebuild supply chain hosted by the "technologically civilized" half+ of the world, i.e. by 4B+ of people, in a country of 340M. I.e. a supply chain at least 10x smaller, with at least 10x less competition (or the alternative - same number of suppliers 10x smaller in size). We all know what happens when there is 10x less competition. (and the alternative is even worse - the suppliers being 10x smaller in size is a loss of manufacturing efficiency which comes and goes with the scale of mass production and probably isn't possible at all as small suppliers usually quickly fail and/or scooped by larger ones, especially given that their addressable market is also 10x smaller)

acdha•45m ago
How quickly did they move to China? Decades, right? Coming back takes that kind of timescale because everything needs to align – making PCs means that they need suppliers for every component, and those factories inputs, and logistics keeping factories’ production synchronized, and a lot of different skilled labor categories which aren’t trivially available. If you’re setting up a factory in the Midwest assembling parts from China, all you’re doing is ensuring that the results cost more and none of the key businesses are likely to come back because tariffs won’t make a factory competitive outside of the country.

You can encourage the whole thing to move but it needs to be a carefully considered long-term plan with strategic investments and ongoing investment. That’s the opposite of what we’re seeing now with tariffs changing every time an octogenarian gets cranky, and his party is trying to slash investments rather than grow them. No business is going to assume that any promise made will last for a business quarter, much less the years needed, and without some major funding commitments nobody is going to jump to line up tens of billions in financing.

mixdup•8m ago
how much of the value chain was actually in the US back then, and, how much could feasibly move to the US?

Even in the 90s, major components were made in Taiwan and Japan. And since that time, the US ability to make what we did previously has atrophied

What do we really get out of Dell moving PC manufacturing to the US if every single part they consume was manufactured in China or Taiwan? Final assembly is the lowest value part of the equation. Apple already did this shell game with the Mac Pro a few years ago and it didn't last long nor did it have a meaningful impact on anything other than the price of the product

abtinf•1h ago
The entire field of economics demonstrates the opposite. The result of tariffs will be fewer and worse jobs in the US, with everyone's standard of living going down.
youngtaff•4h ago
It’s not just tariffs that are the issue… quite a few people from other countries have stopped coming to the US and are avoiding buying US products where possible
Waterluvian•3h ago
I’ve never seen this level of anti-American sentiment in Canada in my whole life.

One thing I have my eye on is how hard consumer habits are to change. For example, American alcohol is simply gone from store shelves in Ontario. I can only imagine how much marketing work went up in the wind now that consumers have adapted. Returning the product to the market is probably not even the hard part.

fakedang•2h ago
A Canadian just died in ICE custody. I don't see any reason why Canadians should visit the US.
PartiallyTyped•3h ago
Trust that I and lots of others in Europe — and especially Scandinavia — are boycotting US products — the most basic one I can think of is coca-cola, instead I buy "freeway", ie Lidl's inhouse brand, and I don't think I am going back.
tombert•2h ago
Freeway is honestly pretty competitive with Coke in taste. I haven't tried the sugary stuff but I have had a fair amount of their sugar-free drinks and I think they're actually quite good. Slightly differently than Diet Coke/Coke Zero, but not really "worse".
tombert•2h ago
I don't blame them. My wife got her US citizenship very recently (like two months ago), and historically I have thought that was going to allow me to finally have a sigh of relief after years of fighting with and thousands of dollars spent for the immigration system in the US.

Now Republicans are actively trying to denaturalize people so they can be deported. I have no idea how successful that will actually be but the fact that there's an active attempt for it is enough to trigger anxiety for me.

If this is how they're treating naturalized citizens, I certainly cannot blame people for not visiting the US on a tourist visa; who the fuck knows what would happen to them? They're detaining tourists for bald JD Vance memes [1], I would stay the hell away from America and spend my vacation money elsewhere.

It really depresses me. I love the US. I was born here. I live here. Much as I love visiting Europe, I haven't really wanted to live anywhere else than the US, but I fear that this active hostility towards our foreign trading partners might cause permanent and irreparable damage. For the first time in my life, I have seriously started to consider moving me and my wife to a different country, which I hope I don't have to do but I am genuinely scared that they're going to detain my Mexican-immigrant wife.

[1] I know that CBP is denying that it was because of a meme, but instead because of drug use, but in this particular case, legitimacy doesn't matter. If it's believable that I could be detained in a country because I texted a meme to my friends, there's absolutely no way in hell I am visiting that country.

protocolture•2h ago
The border situation is quite harmful to tourism, to the point where advice is being issued to be careful traveling to the USA. Its not a new thing except in scale either. The same shit was happening as far back as 2015, it just keeps getting worse. And from what I can tell, news reports about how hostile the US is to tourists, doesnt get airtime in the US. People seem shocked or think I am joking when I share story after story of people wrongfully apprehended at the border.
quitit•2h ago
On avoiding travel: One doesn't have to make a principled decision, it's entirely rational to avoid travel to the USA.

There's a growing body of holiday makers with neither a criminal record nor evidence of carrying a banned substance, who have been turned away from the USA for nothing more than the vibes of the CBP. In some cases these people were strip searched and thrown into federal prison without any kind of evidence and no wrongdoing whatsoever.

An informed person would be right in holidaying elsewhere, otherwise it's a gamble if they will lose the money paid for their holiday and flights.

On avoiding business with the USA: The tariffs and their mercurial changes create a type of instability where a USA-based vendor, at random, may no longer be able to fulfil their contract. It's incredibly damaging for our American partners.

wnevets•3h ago
The "bad news is actually good news" post are gonna be wild.
pupppet•45m ago
Or it’s Biden‘s economy until there’s a turnaround.
ericyd•3h ago
If it weren't tragic it would be hilarious that Trump is the worst thing the US economy has seen since COVID.
game_the0ry•2h ago
Given how many layoffs there have been and how much bad economic news has been coming out, I am quit surprised that we are not in a full blown technical recession. Even the DJI is touching historic highs and bond yields are down.

I know I sound like an armchair economist, which is probably why I am on here ranting instead of on a tropical beach with super models name Brooke and Tiffany, eating lobster and beluga caviar, washing it all down with fine champagne.

I can only assume that the last 5 years have been so solid for the economy that we have a long way down to go before we even begin to feel pain.

toomuchtodo•1h ago
Structural demographics. ~13k-14k workers leave the labor force every day, through a combination of retirement and death. Beat on the economy hard with these terminal interest rates and tariffs, demand for labor will still exceed supply.

https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...

jocaal•2h ago
https://polymarket.com/event/us-recession-in-2025?tid=175098...

Polymarket puts 30% chance on a recession.

consumer451•39m ago
I have a heavy bias against that website, but it may be unfounded.

It's been around for a while now, are there any 3rd party reliable studies showing how good polymarket markets are at predicting events?