Here's a genuinely terrible idea: go out and get two degrees in a humanities discipline, spend 20+ years leveraging that to make dick jokes to an audience smaller than any measurable amount of statistical white noise, then have world events conspire to compel you to write down words in a public space about tariffs. Do I know what tariffs actually are? Reader, I couldn't tell you who Smoot is, let alone Hawley. How am I supposed to be able to lay out for you in any kind of understandable way what it is they are supposed to have achieved and/or failed at, depending on the outcome of whatever it is they did or didn't do?
I'm not! But here's the best news: we are in the era where knowing about a thing no longer precludes anyone from acting on it, not only in public but in ways that directly (some might even say menacingly) affects the public! This is the post-norms society we all (100% if us, if the primetime lineup on Fox News is to be believed*) voted for six months ago when we avoided a Harris-led American present that looked a lot like the four years prior. Admittedly, still a pretty horrifying prospect if you're a Palestinian in Gaza, but for the rest of us, well, I can at least say for certain that since the election, no Haitians have eaten my cat. Promises kept.
I'm not going to try to make a point about the vapidity of punditry and the ubiquity of the Hot Take Media Ecology. Those points have been made, over and over, including by me, but usually by other media people commenting on how media people are all so shallow and Don't Get It, not like us, the Smart Ones who are above all this crassness and embarrassingly insincere performative outrage, some examples of which we will definitely provide right after this message from Tylenol PM. If nothing else, you can trust me and the integrity of my position as I've got decades of commitment to working on the internet while generating zero American dollars in proceeds from it.** That kind of unbesmirched purity you can't buy in this day and age (even when it's actively being offered for sale, come on people).
No, the point I'm making is that expertise is passé, as they say in French, a language that has already gone through what the United States as an economic animating force is now experiencing: a long period of global expansion and recognition driven by contraction and collapse into a bemusing curiosity by a series of catastrophic self-inflicted economic wounds literally everyone else around you told you was a bad idea. In France's case, it was the failure to diversify from their over-reliance on beaver pelts as a trade good. For us, it seems to be levying trade penalties on islands inhabited almost exclusively by penguins. In my lifetime a Ben Franklin USA $100 bill will be regarded the same as a French-language phrasebook, relegated to use by nostalgics and contrarians who think Mandarin is "boring" just because literally everyone uses it now. A quaint, maybe interesting thing to roll out on a date, but nothing to build a meaningful life around.
So I'm off the hook trying to explain tariffs, because the people who are actually implementing them don't seem to know what one is/does/corrects for either. Learning things is hard. It takes real time and effort, some measure of motivation and a minimal amount of applied discipline. My next move is going to be walking into a music store and smashing my fists over and over again against the wooden top of a closed piano, then trying to fight anyone in there who dares to tell me they didn't just hear Chopin's Piano Concerto No. 2 in F Minor.
A lifetime of learning stuff I can now just do without. It really is Liberation Day.
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*and, you know, under no circumstances
**well, almost zero American dollars