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To: the traveler who wrote (1540987)6/2/2025 4:19:06 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1580215
 
TACO trump: Walmart workers are sharing photos of price hikes of 38% or more, and some prices are up at Target too
businessinsider.com
By Dominick Reuter


Walmart CFO John David Rainey recently said that tariff rates remain "too high" and warned that prices will go up. Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

  • Photos are appearing on social media showing sharp price increases at Walmart and Target.
  • Walmart's CFO recently said tariff rates were "too high" and that prices would go up on some items.
  • Analysts expect the overall impact of tariffs to represent a small percentage of total spending.

President Donald Trump's tariffs appear to be hitting the shelves at Walmart and Target stores across the US.

Walmart employees have been sharing photos recently on the Walmart subreddit showing sharp price increases of as much as 45% at the retail giant. Meanwhile, some of the items have also seen price increases at rival retailer Target.

In one example, a Walmart label shows the price of a Jurassic World T. Rex toy jumping from $39.92 on April 27 to $55 on May 21, an increase of nearly 38%.

A third-party website that tracks Walmart prices, AisleGopher, shows the price was $29.74 back in November.


A baby doll sold at Walmart recently jumped in price. AisleGopher.comAnother toy — a Baby Born doll — jumped from $34.97 in March to $49.97 in May, an increase of about 43%.

And in a third case, a left-handed fishing reel sold by Walmart went from $57.37 in April to $83.26 in May, or a 45% jump. The price was $51.12 on March 14, according to AisleGopher's price history.


A third-party website tracking Walmart prices shows recent price hikes to a fishing reel. AisleGopher.comSome of the price increases have happened even more recently.

On Wednesday, the same two toys were listed on Target.com for roughly the same prices that Walmart had carried them for before the price increase. By Thursday, however, the Baby Born doll price was increased to be in line with Walmart.


Prices of a Jurassic World T. Rex toy on Walmart.com and Target.com as of Thursday, May 29. Walmart; Target"We have always worked to keep our prices as low as possible and we won't stop," a Walmart spokesperson told BI in a statement. "We'll keep prices as low as we can for as long as we can given the reality of small retail margins."

Walmart CFO John David Rainey said recently that tariff rates remain "too high" and warned that prices would go up on some items in the coming weeks and months.President Trump responded by saying Walmart should " eat the tariffs."

Target CEO Brian Cornell said price increases would be a "very last resort" and that the company would aim to offset the new import costs in other ways. Target didn't immediately comment when contacted by Business Insider.

Although certain items are seeing significant hikes, companies can choose to raise prices for a variety of reasons, and the listings don't indicate how much tariffs may have impacted the retail price.

Mizuho retail analyst David Bellinger said in a note Wednesday that investors expect the overall impact of tariffs to represent a low-single-digit percentage of total spending.

A US federal court ruled on Wednesday that Trump does not have the authority to impose his sweeping tariff strategy.

Walmart has said it sources about 60% of what it sells in the US from US suppliers, and the company has been on a multi-year effort to reduce its reliance on Chinese imports, which werethe subject of the steepest tariff rates.



To: the traveler who wrote (1540987)6/2/2025 4:28:35 AM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

Recommended By
Wharf Rat

  Respond to of 1580215
 
TACO & PUTIN LOSING: AN ASTONISHING RAID DEEP INSIDE RUSSIA DAMAGES OVER 40 TOP-SECRET STRATEGIC BOMBERS
economist.com

Photograph: AP

Jun 1st 2025|KYIV

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SHORTLY AFTER noon on June 1st, Russian social media began flashing, alerting the world to Ukraine’s most audacious operation on Russian territory to date. In Irkutsk province in eastern Siberia, some 4,000km from Ukraine, locals posted footage of small quadcopter drones emerging from lorries and flying toward a nearby airfield, home to some of Russia’s most important strategic bombers. “I work at a tyre shop,” one wrote. “A lorry pulled in, and drones flew out of it.” From an airbase near Murmansk, in Russia’s far north, came similar stories: “The driver’s running around...drones are flying from his lorry toward the base.” Other alarmed posts soon followed from airbases in Ryazan and Ivanovo provinces, deep in central Russia.



To: the traveler who wrote (1540987)6/2/2025 4:30:32 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1580215
 
TACO & PUTIN LOSING: "Drones Hidden In Trucks": How Ukraine Struck 5 Airfields Deep Inside Russia
Drones were smuggled into Russia in advance. They were concealed under the roofs of wooden cabins installed on trucks. At the time of the attack, the structures' roofs were opened remotely to let the drones fly toward their short-distance targets.
ndtv.com

Zelensky said Ukraine deployed 117 drones in a massive attack.

Moscow:Ukraine on Sunday orchestrated a massive drone attack targeting five key Russian military airbases in its "most long-range operation", striking targets deep into Russian territory--thousands of kilometres from the front line. Under the covert operation code-named "Spider's web," Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) struck at least 41 aircraft used to "bomb Ukrainian cities", including Tu-95 and Tu-22 strategic bombers and the A-50 radar detection and command aircraft.

Moscow confirmed that five of its airfields in Murmansk, Irkutsk, Ivanovo, Ryazan, and Amur regions were targeted by Kyiv using first-person-view (FPV) drones.

"The Kyiv regime staged a terror attack with the use of FPV drones on airfields in the Murmansk, Irkutsk, Ivanovo, Ryazan, and Amur Regions. All terror attacks on military airfields in the Ivanovo, Ryazan, and Amur Regions were repelled. No casualties were reported either among servicemen or civilians. Some of those involved in the terror attacks were detained," Russia's defence ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

Moscow accepted that several of its aircraft "caught fire" in the attacks. "As a result of the launch of FPV drones from territories in close proximity to military airfields in the Murmansk and Irkutsk Regions, several aircraft caught fire. The fires were extinguished," the statement said.

Modus Operandi Of Operation Spider's WebUkraine regularly launches drones to strike targets in Russia in response to the Russian invasion of 2022, but the modus operandi used this time was different.

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The operation "Spider's web" was launched after the planning of over a year and a half, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said, as he hailed "brilliant" results from "our most long-range operation" in more than three years of war. Zelensky said Ukraine deployed 117 drones in a massive attack, which hit "34 per cent of the strategic cruise missile carriers" at the targeted airfields.

According to Ukrainian SBU sources, the planning of the operation required particularly complex logistics. Drones were smuggled into Russia in advance. They were concealed under the roofs of wooden cabins installed on trucks. At the time of the attack, the structures' roofs were opened remotely to let the drones fly toward their short-distance targets.

Photos shared by the SBU show numerous small black drones hidden in what appears to be transport containers.

Russia's defence ministry confirmed that the drones were not launched from Ukrainian territory but "in the immediate vicinity of the airbases".

The Belaya airbase in Irkutsk Oblast, which is around 4,300 kilometres from Ukraine, border and Olenya airbase in Murmansk Oblast, which is around 2,000 kilometres from the frontlines in the north, were hit under the attack. Video circulating online appears to show Russian aircraft in flames at these two airbases, with thick smoke rising above the tarmac.

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The Russian ministry said it successfully countered other attacks in the regions of Ivanovo and Ryazan as well as in Amur, near the border with China in the Russian Far East.

'Damage in Billions'Ukraine's SBU security service has claimed that it has hit Russian military planes worth a combined $7 billion in a wave of drone strikes. "$7 billion: This is the estimated cost of the enemy's strategic aviation, which was hit today as a result of the SBU's special operation," the agency said in a social media post.

However, Russia has not confirmed the claim so far. SBU earlier claimed that coordinated attacks hit 41 aircraft used to "bomb Ukrainian cities", claiming damage to Tu-95 and Tu-22 strategic bombers and the A-50 radar detection and command aircraft.

Russia's defence ministry also confirmed that "several aircraft caught fire" following a drone attack at bases in the regions of Murmansk and Irkutsk, located in the Russian Arctic and eastern Siberia.

The fires were contained, the ministry said, and caused no casualties. Russia said it had arrested several suspects, including the driver of a truck from which a drone had taken off, state agencies said.

But Zelensky said people involved in preparing the attacks were "extracted from Russian territory in time".

TimingThe long-planned operation came at a delicate moment three years into Russia's invasion.

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said Sunday that he was sending a delegation to Istanbul led by his Defence Minister Rustem Umerov for talks on Monday with Russian officials.

Turkey is hosting the meeting, which was spurred by US President Donald Trump's push for a quick deal to end the three-year war.

Zelensky, who previously voiced scepticism about whether Russia was serious in proposing Monday's meeting, said priorities included "a complete and unconditional ceasefire" and the return of prisoners and abducted children.

Russia, which has rejected previous ceasefire requests, said it had formulated its own peace terms but refused to divulge them in advance.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his US counterpart Marco Rubio spoke by telephone Sunday about "several initiatives aimed at a political solution to the Ukraine crisis", including Monday's talks, the Russian foreign ministry said in a statement carried by the TASS news agency.