BTW, for Americans living near the Northern border, instead of paying 175% on Chinese goods, there's an alternative ...
Come up to Canada, buy the goods here at a non-tariffed price, then bring them back to the US ... even with paying a 25-50% tariff on "Canadian" goods, it's still cheaper!
(The reverse of years of Canadian shoppers going to the US for cheap goods ...)
Observations from 'south of the (Canadian) border':
I'm about 70 miles south of the border, and have been for well over 40 years.
Most of the Canadian 'shoppers' I saw coming through were looking to have medical procedures done in a more timely fashion than waiting on the Canadian healthcare system, even though quite a few used to come down to party.
That has tapered off considerably in the last fifteen years or so.
Some wanted to drive across to the East and would prefer buying fuel by the gallon rather than by the liter, and it was (considerably) cheaper, too.
While we had sales taxes that started at 5.5% in ND (and none in Montana), they were nowhere near the VATs added on by the provinces up there, some of which would virtually double the price of an item at the checkout.
There are a lot of factors which affect cross border commerce, and COVID pretty much shut that down.