Summary

Home Depot co-founder and GOP megadonor Ken Langone blasted Trump’s sweeping tariffs as “bulls–t,” calling the 10% across-the-board rate and country-specific hikes—like 34% on China and 46% on Vietnam—“too aggressive” and poorly calculated.

Langone criticized the administration’s formula, based on trade deficits, as nonsensical.

Other prominent figures, including economists and billionaires like Stanley Druckenmiller, Bill Ackman, and Elon Musk, have also spoken out.

Critics warn the tariffs hinder negotiation and lack sound economic grounding. Langone said Trump is being “poorly advised” on trade policy.

  • @[email protected]
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    17 days ago

    “Why the fuck are you stupid leopards eating my face?!I bribed good money to have them eat the poories while I laughed!”

  • @[email protected]
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    019 days ago

    So he got conned by a con man. You know what you called people who got conned? Suckers and losers.

  • @[email protected]
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    018 days ago

    Tough luck rich guy. You wanted it so you could go back to your fantasy of the past. Now he is shitting on you like he promised to do and you helped pay for it. schadenfreude

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago

      I find it particularly funny that he says Trump is being “poorly advised” on trade policy. You are already at the stage where the Czar is never to blame, it always falls on the Noble advisors at his imperial court.

      • @[email protected]
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        018 days ago

        I see it more like saying his handlers ought to be handling him better. Maybe the people who Trump is supposed to serve are having trouble with that. I do hope so. If his wealthy backers turn against him, he won’t last long.

      • @[email protected]
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        017 days ago

        I swear I saw an undertaker measuring Musk for the casket. Even he’s got to realized he’s being set up as the fall guy. Before the year is out, he’ll be propped up for display in the town square for everyone to revile (and be distracted from the real fascist).

        FIGURATIVELY

  • @[email protected]
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    019 days ago

    These kinds of people could lose 90% of their wealth and nothing material would change in their lives (ok maybe after they drop down to mere 100 millionaire status they’d have to sell the mega yacht). It’s hilarious to see people like this getting upset because “number went down”, when they could just choose to not be upset about it-- they’re literally too broken in their brains to be happy.

    • @[email protected]
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      018 days ago

      They have mental illness - OCD and Hoarding.

      If I collected old newspapers, or cats, or old vehicles, etc., far beyond what anyone would consider normal, I’d be called a hoarder, and people around me would try to get me medical attention.

      But when these people do the same thing with money, they are practically worshipped, and they are encouraged to hoard more, and use their money to change the laws to get them even more money to hoard. Imagine someone who is hoarding hundreds of cats, and actively breeding more of them. NOBODY would encourage it, they would take the cats away, and find them new homes, and get psychatric treatment for the hoarder.

      We need to treat billionaires like the financial hoarders that they are. Take away their hoard, and discourage hoarding behavior in the future, for the same reasons that we would remove the cats - because it’s bad for society.

      • @[email protected]
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        018 days ago

        I don’t think it’s just about possessions for them, it’s about power, influence. If he get’s slightly poorer, he may no more be able to buy politicians and make them do what he wants.

        • gonzo-rand19
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          017 days ago

          You can buy a US congressperson for as little as $10-15k depending on the state, so that really can’t be it. Check OpenSecrets for confirmation.

    • Ænima
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      018 days ago

      But they never do, nor will they ever have to. They can just sue the company for poor stock performance and then claim the unrealized losses as a tax write-off this year. It’s infuriating. If aliens are real, I hope they can summon the billionaires money in physical form and then drop it on them.

  • @[email protected]
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    19 days ago

    Yeah, founder of home Depot can go fuck himself.

    Also don’t shop at home Depot, he might be gone but the company still donated heavily Republican compared to most other hardware stores outside of Menards.

    • @[email protected]
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      19 days ago

      I hate that I can’t avoid them entirely in my area except for nuts-and-bolts type things, which I go to my local hardware store for. Home Depot and Lowe’s have a monopoly in my area when it comes to most goods, but I had to give up on Lowe’s entirely due to the truly terrible customer experience.

      (Home Depot has a bad customer experience too, but my local Lowe’s is on a different level.)

      • @[email protected]
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        018 days ago

        My local Lowes turned me off by having their music blaring way, way too loud for some event. Like, needed earplugs on that half of the store loud.

        Now Home Depot has turned me off by not having any human-run checkout counters anymore, and all the self checkouts have incredibly distracting “we’re recording you” screens. Plus, you know, the politics.

        The Ace hardware is still awesome and has a store dog (no outside dogs allowed). Store dog is a friendly, happy lab.

        • @[email protected]
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          018 days ago

          What really annoys me is that my local Home Depot no longer has nuts and bolts in open bins. Often I need some bolts and nuts to connect one thing to another. Sure you can measure, but that introduces room for error. It’s so much better to just take the part you need bits and bobs for to an aisle full of nuts and bolts. Then you can just directly check to see what fits. No need to measure. Just see if the bolt fits in the hole. Zero chance for error. There’s nothing worse than making a drive to a store, getting the thing you need, just to get back home and realize you bought the wrong thing.

          They still have nuts and bolts, but they’re sealed in shitty little plastic bags of a handful of items each. I can’t just open a small drawer full of washers, faff about until I find what I need, and then purchase the exact quantity for a given project.

          Sure, I get that it’s a theft risk. But come on. We’re talking about nuts and bolts here. It’s not like those have a huge resale value on the black market. Maybe it’s a labor thing, having to keep the bins sorted. But if a hardware store can’t even maintain a good accessible selection of basic mechanical fasteners, what are we even doing anymore?

          This is the kind of thing any big hardware store should offer, even if they have to offer it as a loss leader to get people in the door. There have been many trips that I could have gone to Home Depot, for nuts and bolts and some other items. I might spend $50-100 total. However, I make my decision on what store to go to based on a few dollars worth of fasteners. By trying to prevent theft and loss for a few pennies worth of fasteners, Home Depot loses out on hundreds of dollars of my purchases.

          • @[email protected]
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            018 days ago

            It’s not concern about theft, it’s just penny-ante nickel-and-dime BS to get you to buy more than you need. But as you said, it’s so hostile to customers that you wind up going somewhere else for bigger ticket items. Of course the opportunity cost is invisible to them.

      • @[email protected]
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        019 days ago

        Yeah, I simply choose bad customer service over more money donated to Republicans.

        Thankfully around me there’s an Ace hardware that is locally owned by people who aren’t publicly political so that’s my go to.

  • @[email protected]
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    017 days ago

    Ken Langone blasted Trump’s sweeping tariffs as “bulls–t,” calling the 10% across-the-board rate and country-specific hikes—like 34% on China and 46% on Vietnam—“too aggressive” and poorly calculated.

    Well, you should’ve thought about that before you donated money to him.

    Megadonor? More like Mega-simp.