Starting in the 1950s, there was a push to get meat onto Americans' plates at every meal.
So you would have breakfast with maybe perhaps sausage offered.
You'd have lunch where it would be deli meat sandwiches.
And you'd have dinner that would center over a large cut of meat.
The hidden forces behind our everyday decisions.
That's on the TED Radio Hour from NPR.
Live from NPR News, I'm Dale Willman.
A 25% tariff on imported auto parts is now in effect.
President Trump had initially offered automakers a partial reprieve,
but as NPR's Camilla Dominovsky reports,
the tariffs are still expected to have a major effect on the auto industry.
This week,
President Trump announced that automakers importing foreign parts for U.S.-built cars could get reimbursed for some tariffs,
temporarily,
in recognition of the fact that it's not possible to build a car with exclusively U.S. parts right now.
The industry welcomed the change.
but the tariffs are still expected to cut profits and drive up prices.
The reprieve doesn't extend to anyone buying parts for repairs,
so the tariff will make it more costly to maintain existing cars,
as well as sending insurance prices, which have been rising for several years, up even higher.