Tariffs Catch-All

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But even as resorts take steps to fix their own mistakes, they cannot solve Las Vegas’ or the nation’s deeper tourism problem alone. The decline in international visitors, especially from Canada and Mexico, Nevada’s two largest foreign markets, has been catastrophic. No number of discounted room rates will fix it as long as the White House keeps waging war on foreign tourism.

President Donald Trump’s “America First” bluster may play well on social media, but it is hammering tourism-dependent cities like Las Vegas. Canadians, who once poured 1.49 million visitors into Nevada each year, are increasingly staying home. International visitors, who typically stay longer and spend more, are crucial to the city’s economy — and they are being driven away.

Keep in mind, it’s not just Las Vegas or even large cities generally that rely on tourism dollars. Outdoor recreation brings $8.1 billion into Nevada’s economy and employs 58,000 people in the Silver State. Much of that money goes to places like the Moapa Valley, Mesquite and Laughlin, which serve as gateways to the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Utah’s national parks and Northern Arizona’s canyon country, respectively.

The reasons international tourists are staying away aren’t a mystery. Trump’s new “visa integrity fee,” which forces foreign tourists to hand over $250 in addition to existing visa costs, is the latest unnecessary barrier. Add to that Trump’s tariffs, his habit of insulting foreign leaders and companies, and his Justice Department’s aggressive immigration tactics that round up anyone who looks like they might not be a U.S. citizen, and you get a simple truth: People are less likely to spend their hard-earned vacation dollars in a country whose president seems to view them with disdain.

The damage goes beyond economics. Travel is, at its heart, an act of goodwill. It is a declaration that people want to experience American culture, spend their money here and share a little of their own culture in return. When a president mocks other nations, treats allies like adversaries and slaps unnecessary taxes and fees on travelers, he poisons that spirit.

Las Vegas can’t afford that kind of poison. No U.S. city can. Tourism is one of America’s greatest exports and international visitors are among its best customers. In 2026, when the United States co-hosts the World Cup, millions of foreign fans will decide whether to spend their time and money in cities like Las Vegas. If they are greeted with insults, they will simply go elsewhere.
 


But even as resorts take steps to fix their own mistakes, they cannot solve Las Vegas’ or the nation’s deeper tourism problem alone. The decline in international visitors, especially from Canada and Mexico, Nevada’s two largest foreign markets, has been catastrophic. No number of discounted room rates will fix it as long as the White House keeps waging war on foreign tourism.

President Donald Trump’s “America First” bluster may play well on social media, but it is hammering tourism-dependent cities like Las Vegas. Canadians, who once poured 1.49 million visitors into Nevada each year, are increasingly staying home. International visitors, who typically stay longer and spend more, are crucial to the city’s economy — and they are being driven away.

Keep in mind, it’s not just Las Vegas or even large cities generally that rely on tourism dollars. Outdoor recreation brings $8.1 billion into Nevada’s economy and employs 58,000 people in the Silver State. Much of that money goes to places like the Moapa Valley, Mesquite and Laughlin, which serve as gateways to the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Utah’s national parks and Northern Arizona’s canyon country, respectively.

The reasons international tourists are staying away aren’t a mystery. Trump’s new “visa integrity fee,” which forces foreign tourists to hand over $250 in addition to existing visa costs, is the latest unnecessary barrier. Add to that Trump’s tariffs, his habit of insulting foreign leaders and companies, and his Justice Department’s aggressive immigration tactics that round up anyone who looks like they might not be a U.S. citizen, and you get a simple truth: People are less likely to spend their hard-earned vacation dollars in a country whose president seems to view them with disdain.

The damage goes beyond economics. Travel is, at its heart, an act of goodwill. It is a declaration that people want to experience American culture, spend their money here and share a little of their own culture in return. When a president mocks other nations, treats allies like adversaries and slaps unnecessary taxes and fees on travelers, he poisons that spirit.

Las Vegas can’t afford that kind of poison. No U.S. city can. Tourism is one of America’s greatest exports and international visitors are among its best customers. In 2026, when the United States co-hosts the World Cup, millions of foreign fans will decide whether to spend their time and money in cities like Las Vegas. If they are greeted with insults, they will simply go elsewhere.
Trump is bad for business.
 


But even as resorts take steps to fix their own mistakes, they cannot solve Las Vegas’ or the nation’s deeper tourism problem alone. The decline in international visitors, especially from Canada and Mexico, Nevada’s two largest foreign markets, has been catastrophic. No number of discounted room rates will fix it as long as the White House keeps waging war on foreign tourism.

President Donald Trump’s “America First” bluster may play well on social media, but it is hammering tourism-dependent cities like Las Vegas. Canadians, who once poured 1.49 million visitors into Nevada each year, are increasingly staying home. International visitors, who typically stay longer and spend more, are crucial to the city’s economy — and they are being driven away.

Keep in mind, it’s not just Las Vegas or even large cities generally that rely on tourism dollars. Outdoor recreation brings $8.1 billion into Nevada’s economy and employs 58,000 people in the Silver State. Much of that money goes to places like the Moapa Valley, Mesquite and Laughlin, which serve as gateways to the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Utah’s national parks and Northern Arizona’s canyon country, respectively.

The reasons international tourists are staying away aren’t a mystery. Trump’s new “visa integrity fee,” which forces foreign tourists to hand over $250 in addition to existing visa costs, is the latest unnecessary barrier. Add to that Trump’s tariffs, his habit of insulting foreign leaders and companies, and his Justice Department’s aggressive immigration tactics that round up anyone who looks like they might not be a U.S. citizen, and you get a simple truth: People are less likely to spend their hard-earned vacation dollars in a country whose president seems to view them with disdain.

The damage goes beyond economics. Travel is, at its heart, an act of goodwill. It is a declaration that people want to experience American culture, spend their money here and share a little of their own culture in return. When a president mocks other nations, treats allies like adversaries and slaps unnecessary taxes and fees on travelers, he poisons that spirit.

Las Vegas can’t afford that kind of poison. No U.S. city can. Tourism is one of America’s greatest exports and international visitors are among its best customers. In 2026, when the United States co-hosts the World Cup, millions of foreign fans will decide whether to spend their time and money in cities like Las Vegas. If they are greeted with insults, they will simply go elsewhere.
Trump trying to bankrupt more casinos.
 


But even as resorts take steps to fix their own mistakes, they cannot solve Las Vegas’ or the nation’s deeper tourism problem alone. The decline in international visitors, especially from Canada and Mexico, Nevada’s two largest foreign markets, has been catastrophic. No number of discounted room rates will fix it as long as the White House keeps waging war on foreign tourism.

President Donald Trump’s “America First” bluster may play well on social media, but it is hammering tourism-dependent cities like Las Vegas. Canadians, who once poured 1.49 million visitors into Nevada each year, are increasingly staying home. International visitors, who typically stay longer and spend more, are crucial to the city’s economy — and they are being driven away.

Keep in mind, it’s not just Las Vegas or even large cities generally that rely on tourism dollars. Outdoor recreation brings $8.1 billion into Nevada’s economy and employs 58,000 people in the Silver State. Much of that money goes to places like the Moapa Valley, Mesquite and Laughlin, which serve as gateways to the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Utah’s national parks and Northern Arizona’s canyon country, respectively.

The reasons international tourists are staying away aren’t a mystery. Trump’s new “visa integrity fee,” which forces foreign tourists to hand over $250 in addition to existing visa costs, is the latest unnecessary barrier. Add to that Trump’s tariffs, his habit of insulting foreign leaders and companies, and his Justice Department’s aggressive immigration tactics that round up anyone who looks like they might not be a U.S. citizen, and you get a simple truth: People are less likely to spend their hard-earned vacation dollars in a country whose president seems to view them with disdain.

The damage goes beyond economics. Travel is, at its heart, an act of goodwill. It is a declaration that people want to experience American culture, spend their money here and share a little of their own culture in return. When a president mocks other nations, treats allies like adversaries and slaps unnecessary taxes and fees on travelers, he poisons that spirit.

Las Vegas can’t afford that kind of poison. No U.S. city can. Tourism is one of America’s greatest exports and international visitors are among its best customers. In 2026, when the United States co-hosts the World Cup, millions of foreign fans will decide whether to spend their time and money in cities like Las Vegas. If they are greeted with insults, they will simply go elsewhere.
Given that Nevada voted for Trump last year, I guess they've reached the FAFO stage in their support of Dear Leader.
 


But even as resorts take steps to fix their own mistakes, they cannot solve Las Vegas’ or the nation’s deeper tourism problem alone. The decline in international visitors, especially from Canada and Mexico, Nevada’s two largest foreign markets, has been catastrophic. No number of discounted room rates will fix it as long as the White House keeps waging war on foreign tourism.

President Donald Trump’s “America First” bluster may play well on social media, but it is hammering tourism-dependent cities like Las Vegas. Canadians, who once poured 1.49 million visitors into Nevada each year, are increasingly staying home. International visitors, who typically stay longer and spend more, are crucial to the city’s economy — and they are being driven away.

Keep in mind, it’s not just Las Vegas or even large cities generally that rely on tourism dollars. Outdoor recreation brings $8.1 billion into Nevada’s economy and employs 58,000 people in the Silver State. Much of that money goes to places like the Moapa Valley, Mesquite and Laughlin, which serve as gateways to the Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Utah’s national parks and Northern Arizona’s canyon country, respectively.

The reasons international tourists are staying away aren’t a mystery. Trump’s new “visa integrity fee,” which forces foreign tourists to hand over $250 in addition to existing visa costs, is the latest unnecessary barrier. Add to that Trump’s tariffs, his habit of insulting foreign leaders and companies, and his Justice Department’s aggressive immigration tactics that round up anyone who looks like they might not be a U.S. citizen, and you get a simple truth: People are less likely to spend their hard-earned vacation dollars in a country whose president seems to view them with disdain.

The damage goes beyond economics. Travel is, at its heart, an act of goodwill. It is a declaration that people want to experience American culture, spend their money here and share a little of their own culture in return. When a president mocks other nations, treats allies like adversaries and slaps unnecessary taxes and fees on travelers, he poisons that spirit.

Las Vegas can’t afford that kind of poison. No U.S. city can. Tourism is one of America’s greatest exports and international visitors are among its best customers. In 2026, when the United States co-hosts the World Cup, millions of foreign fans will decide whether to spend their time and money in cities like Las Vegas. If they are greeted with insults, they will simply go elsewhere.
Good thing they don’t have to pay taxes on tips, right?

Right.
 
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Trump is bad for business.
Including his own! Multiple times over Trump brands failed at casinos, steaks, vodka, mortgage, university, shuttles, ice, furniture, fragrances, board game, telecommunications, magazine, media/tech, travel, Trumpnet, mattress, TruthSocial, spring water.
 
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