Day: September 22, 2025
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert/Youtube
- John Oliver said Jimmy Kimmel’s show getting suspended was the latest blow to free speech in the US.
- The “Last Week Tonight” host said Kimmel was the “latest canary in the coal mine.”
- Kimmel’s show, “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” was pulled off the air over his comments on Charlie Kirk.
John Oliver warned that Jimmy Kimmel’s show being pulled off the air was the latest warning sign that free speech is under attack in the US.
On an episode of his talk show “Last Week Tonight,” aired late on Sunday, the British-American comedian said Kimmel was “by no means the first casualty in Trump’s attacks on free speech.”
“He’s just the latest canary in the coal mine,” Oliver said. “A mine that at this point now seems more dead canary than coal.”
Kimmel’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” was indefinitely suspended by Disney after Brendan Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, criticized Kimmel’s comments about the killing of conservative political activist Charlie Kirk.
Oliver devoted the majority of his 40-minute-long episode to talking about Kimmel’s suspension.
He criticized Carr for walking back what the commissioner said in a 2023 statement about free speech being a check on government control, and the comedian slammed broadcasters Sinclair and Nexstar for what he characterized as bending to the FCC’s will.
Oliver joined the ranks of comedy talk-show hosts who have weighed in on Kimmel’s suspension.
On Thursday night, four of late night’s best-known voices — Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers, and Jon Stewart — criticized Disney’s move and defended Kimmel.
Stewart gave a sarcastic monologue on the suspension. Meyers said it was a “big moment for our democracy.” Colbert called it a “blatant assault on the freedom of speech.” And Fallon said he hoped Kimmel would get his show back.
Oliver’s segment on Kimmel was longer and more critical than those of the American talk show hosts. He said his show was less susceptible to FCC pressure because it was not on broadcast TV.
He ended the segment on Kimmel by urging media companies to stand up against “stupid, ridiculous demands.”
A representative for Oliver did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Paineiras Corcovado
Thomson Reuters
- Bernard Arnault slammed France’s proposed 2% wealth tax.
- Arnault, who is worth about $170 billion, said the tax would “destroy the French economy.”
- The economist behind the tax hike retaliated, saying Arnault’s comments “depart from rationality.”
Bernard Arnault, France’s richest man and the CEO of luxury giant LVMH, has criticized France’s proposed 2% wealth tax.
French economist Gabriel Zucman proposed the tax, which would be imposed on the ultra-rich with net worths of over 100 million euros, or about $117 million. French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu is now under pressure from the Socialist Party to include the wealth tax in France’s 2026 budget.
Speaking to British newspaper The Sunday Times, Arnault said, “This is clearly not a technical or economic debate, but rather a clearly stated desire to destroy the French economy.”
He slammed Zucman, calling him a “far-left activist” and saying that he was using some “pseudo-academic” expertise to destroy the liberal economy.
As of Monday, the Bloomberg Billionaires Index pegged Arnault’s net worth at $169 billion, placing him eighth on the world’s richest list. He once occupied the top spot when his net worth surpassed Elon Musk’s at the end of 2022.
Zucman responded to Arnault’s criticisms in a series of X posts on Sunday.
He said he was surprised by the “caricatural nature” of Arnault’s attacks on him, and the tycoon’s comments “depart from rationality and are unfounded.”
Zucman denied Arnault’s claims that his motives were political in nature. He said he has never been an activist in any movement or a member of any party, and his only work was as a researcher and teacher. According to his faculty profile, he teaches at the Paris School of Economics and UC Berkeley.
“Whatever you may think, the time has come to subject billionaires to a minimum tax rate,” Zucman wrote on X, calling it an “instrument of justice, social peace, and budgetary stability.”
Reuters reported that in 2017, French President Emmanuel Macron scrapped France’s decadeslong wealth tax, which was imposed on individuals with assets above 1.3 million euros.
Protests broke out in France last week over the French government’s proposed budget cuts, with protesters carrying “tax the rich” banners in support of Zucman’s proposed tax plan.
Zucman and representatives for LVMH did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.
Han Suyuan/China News Service/VCG/Getty Images
- China’s tech exports to the US have fallen 70% since the fourth quarter due to President Trump’s tariffs.
- Other Asian countries, like South Korea and Vietnam, are exporting much more to the US.
- Global demand for AI products remains strong, boosting Asia’s tech exports overall.
China’s tech exports to the US have cratered, but demand from the rest of the world is keeping the East Asian giant’s trade machine humming.
In August, Chinese shipments of tech products to the US plunged 70% compared to the fourth quarter of 2024, according to a Goldman Sachs analysis published Sunday.
The collapse followed the rollout of President Donald Trump’s new tariffs, including a 20% “fentanyl tariff” on all Chinese imports that took effect in March.
Meanwhile, other Asian economies filled the gap. From the fourth quarter through August, tech exports to the US from countries like South Korea, Vietnam, and India jumped 80%, according to Goldman.
Outside the US, Chinese tech exports didn’t suffer the same fate. Demand in Europe, Asia, and emerging markets kept growing.
“Tech exports to non-US destinations showed little difference between China and the rest of Asia, with tech exports from both performing similarly well compared to other sectors,” wrote Goldman’s analysts.
In July, China and the rest of Asia’s tech exports to non-US markets rose about 20% relative to the fourth quarter of 2024, “reflecting strength in global tech demand,” Goldman’s analysts wrote.
The tariffs underscore how Washington’s trade war is reshaping supply chains and driving high-tech decoupling with China.
But the divergence also reflects a bigger trend: a steady reordering of tech supply chains that accelerated during the pandemic and has been reinforced by Washington’s trade policies.
In 2017, nearly half of the US’s critical tech imports came directly from China. By 2025, that figure has fallen below 20%, Goldman estimated.
Taiwan, Mexico, Japan, India, and Vietnam have gained market share in the process.
Asia AI exports boom
Despite the pressure on China, Asia is thriving in the AI-fueled export boom.
Overall exports from the region rose 7% in dollar terms through August compared to a year earlier, Goldman said. Technology products accounted for more than 60% of those gains.
Taiwan has been the breakout winner, with over 70% of its exports coming from tech — the highest share in Asia.
In August, Taiwan’s exports surged 30% from the fourth quarter of 2024, powered by advanced chips and servers that are critical for AI data centers.
Goldman’s analysts wrote that they expect the reshuffling to continue.
“Tech supply chains will likely continue to shift, further driving high-tech decoupling between the US and China and reconfiguring of Asia’s trade within and outside the region,” they wrote.