This is an adapted excerpt from the May 10 episode of “Velshi.”
Donald Trump is trying to sell a vision to the American people. As his chaotic tariff rollout continues to prove both damaging to the U.S. economy and unpopular among voters, the president has frequently brought up the hardships Americans will face, like his recent remark that children might have “two dolls instead of 30” this Christmas.
Perhaps Trump is using dolls as an example because it sounds frivolous and unimportant in the grand scheme of things — but make no mistake, what the president is trying to sell here has nothing to do with dolls and everything to do with austerity. And that is not what he campaigned on.
For ordinary American families who work hard for every penny, reducing financial hardship to a question of dolls is, actually, deeply offensive. It’s a dismissal of the daily struggle to make ends meet in a country where, for many, the cost of living keeps outpacing wages.
Trump, a man who surrounds himself with gold-plated everything, is trivializing real sacrifices made by working- and middle-class Americans.
Trump’s sweeping tariffs could cost the average household $3,800 a year, hitting working- and middle-class Americans hardest, according to a Yale report. When Trump talks about dolls, what he’s really saying is, “Get ready for hard times.” Trump is telling the American people to prepare for scarcity, to prepare for prices to spike, to prepare for the fact that they probably won’t be able to afford the life they’re used to.
But why do the American people need to do this? To bankroll Trump’s tariffs and tax cuts for the rich. Trump, a man who surrounds himself with gold-plated everything, is trivializing real sacrifices made by working- and middle-class Americans. Make no mistake; this isn’t about dolls or pencils or strollers, it’s about deliberately making life harder for millions of families under the false pretense that doing so is necessary for some greater good. But there is no greater good — unless you’re already pretty rich, and even then it’s not clear that tanking the global economy is beneficial.
Trump’s tariffs don’t just take a wrecking ball to Main Street, they put the U.S. dollar’s global dominance at serious risk of collapse. That’s according to Harvard University economist Ken Rogoff, who told Axios that Trump “is a catalyst and an accelerant … The rest of the world was already seeking more freedom from the dollar, and this lit a fire under it.”
America does not need austerity right now, for any reason. We certainly don’t need austerity so the ultra-wealthy can score another trillion dollars in tax cuts. We don’t need austerity so Trump can pass a cruel budget that guts Medicaid and dismantles the social safety net, all to fund those trillions in tax cuts.
You may remember that after the 9/11 attacks, then-President George W. Bush told Americans that the most patriotic thing they could do was to spend, to keep the economy moving. That was a Republican president encouraging consumer confidence and spending — not austerity — in a moment of real national crisis, because Bush understood what every president except this one does: that in America, consumer spending drives recovery.
But now? We’ve got a Republican president who caused the instability from which we would need to recover, and he’s asking ordinary, non-rich, working Americans to tighten their belts to fix it.
Let’s be clear: Austerity is a real thing that has, historically, in some specific instances, been used successfully. But it’s certainly not a growth strategy, which is what Trump campaigned on. Austerity is the policy of pulling back, two dolls instead of 30, five pencils instead of 250 pencils. Like tariffs, austerity only makes sense in certain, specific circumstances: for instance, during true emergencies, like war or natural disasters. Austerity asks people to sacrifice for the greater good. What’s the greater good here? To what true national emergency are we responding, other than the one Trump is manufacturing through sweeping tariffs that raise prices on everything from groceries to school supplies?
This is austerity without justification. Austerity with no purpose. It’s austerity by design, to make sure the wealthy remain untouched while the rest of the country is told to “make do.”
Let’s be honest, Trump never intended for the wealthy to share in the sacrifice. When Trump says your kid only needs two dolls, he’s not saying his grandkids will get two gifts this holiday season. He’s not telling billionaire CEOs to give up their private jets and fly commercial, or to sell their yachts and board a Carnival Cruise. He’s telling you — the teacher, the truck driver, the single mom, the small business owner — that your life needs to get economically smaller so his billionaire buddies’ tax bills can get smaller.








