@goodmorningbritain: Austin Butler and Zoë Kravitz's chemistry is undeniable! #AustinButler #ZoeKravitz #GMB

GoodMorningBritain
GoodMorningBritain
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Region: GB
Wednesday 27 August 2025 15:25:36 GMT
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lowell.ruef
lowell.ruef :
I will buy you a new tshirt
2025-08-31 13:32:02
3
autumnapollonia
Autumn Apollonia :
Like marry today!
2025-08-28 06:45:10
22
maryamjabaar
Maryam Jabaar :
😂
2025-08-28 19:06:50
0
puritymueni1
Purity Mueni :
😘😘😘
2025-08-30 09:21:17
1
ana.high.note
analise 🍉🇵🇸 :
and we slept with dance dance revolution
2025-08-28 04:55:31
1
dbrv1202
Ltrxll :
I can’t get over their chemistry! 😍 Every scene with Austin Butler and Zoë Kravitz just feels so natural and electric. The way they bounce off each other, the subtle looks, the timing it’s like they bring out the best in each other on screen. Honestly, it’s rare to see this kind of connection, and it makes every scene they share so much more captivating. Can’t wait to see more of them together!
2025-08-27 17:16:59
15
flo.x.p
Flo_ :
I think they did it, multiple times
2025-08-29 10:33:50
5
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1. Immediate Causes of the Export Collapse - After US tariff announcements in April 2025, China imposed tariffs of up to 125% on major US agricultural exports including soybeans, pork, and beef. This led to immediate order cancellations, such as 12,000 tons of pork scrapped in April 2025—the largest cancellation since 2020.   - Supply Chain Disruptions: US agricultural exporters faced demurrage fees, shipment diversions, and blanked sailings (68 instances in April alone), severely limiting export capacity. For example, a hay exporter in central Washington had to reroute shipments to secondary markets like Japan and Dubai at unsustainable costs.   - Loss of Critical Markets: China historically purchased $15.1 billion of US soybeans (2023) and was the top market for US pork, beef, and nuts. With tariffs, exporters emphasized:
1. Immediate Causes of the Export Collapse - After US tariff announcements in April 2025, China imposed tariffs of up to 125% on major US agricultural exports including soybeans, pork, and beef. This led to immediate order cancellations, such as 12,000 tons of pork scrapped in April 2025—the largest cancellation since 2020.  - Supply Chain Disruptions: US agricultural exporters faced demurrage fees, shipment diversions, and blanked sailings (68 instances in April alone), severely limiting export capacity. For example, a hay exporter in central Washington had to reroute shipments to secondary markets like Japan and Dubai at unsustainable costs.  - Loss of Critical Markets: China historically purchased $15.1 billion of US soybeans (2023) and was the top market for US pork, beef, and nuts. With tariffs, exporters emphasized: "No one can replace all the volume that China buys". 2. Commodity Pre-Tariff Export Value (2023) Key Major Retaliators:- Soybeans $27.7 billion. China imports down 22% (Jan-Nov 2024); Brazil now dominates Chinese market. China (125% tariff) Pork $8.2 billion      Massive order cancellations; China suspended imports from major US processors.  China, Mexico (25% tariff)  Beef $10 billion Exports to China ($1.4B in 2023) at risk; South Korea/Japan now top markets.  EU, Canada (25% tariffs)   Hay/Forage 68 blanked sailings; 25% workforce layoffs reported in Washington.            China, Southeast Asia. - Port of Oakland Crisis: As the top US refrigerated export gateway, the port handles 50% of Northern California's perishables. Retaliatory tariffs threaten 29% of its total trade volume, risking thousands of logistics jobs.  - Price Declines: Lumber and paper products lost 20% market value due to oversupply as former China-bound goods flooded domestic markets. 3. Systemic Consequences for US Agriculture - Job Losses & Farm Closures: A Washington hay exporter laid off 25% of its workforce (12 employees), while lumber producers reduced purchasing from loggers and truckers.  - Global Market Shifts:    - Brazil is expanding soybean production by 70 million acres of pastureland, directly competing with US farmers.    - China accelerated investments in farm technology and alternative suppliers (e.g., Brazilian soy, Russian wheat) to ensure food security.  - Broader Economic Losses: The CEPR estimates US welfare losses of 2–4%, with trade-dependent sectors like agriculture disproportionately affected. 4. Farmer Responses: - Short-Term Survival Tactics:    - Storage & Speculation: Farmers like Pepper Roberts stored grain to sell during price spikes, mitigating losses.    - Government Aid: USDA allocated $10 billion in subsidies to offset 2024 losses, though 2025 aid remains uncertain.  - Long-Term Shifts:    - Diversification: Exporters rerouted goods to Japan, Taiwan, and UAE, though these markets absorb <20% of China's volume.    - Technology Adoption: Satellite crop monitoring (e.g., Farmonaut) and blockchain traceability are being used to cut costs and verify compliance.  - Political Divide: 70% of farmers surveyed still support tariffs, hoping they force better trade deals, but warn: "We can’t plan well when there’s so much uncertainty". 5. Broader Implications & Outlook - Indirect Export Channels: Chinese goods increasingly reach the US via Mexico (50% share) and Vietnam (21%) to bypass tariffs, complicating supply chains.  - Irreversible Market Losses: Brazil now supplies 80% of China's soybeans, making a US market reentry unlikely even if tariffs ease.  - The SHIPS Act (2025) threatens additional $1.5 million fees per Chinese vessel, endangering containerized ag exports (55% of export value) . The US farm export collapse is a multifaceted crisis driven by retaliatory tariffs, supply chain failures, and strategic market shifts. While some farmers remain optimistic about long-term policy goals,the immediate reality includes severe financial strain reduced global competitiveness, and permanent market losses.

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