As an American, I never had much of an attachment to 'buying American'. I understood comparative advantage and the benefits it brings to all parties involved. I had neither favoritism for nor against American-made goods or American companies.
I'm now dedicated to buying non-American goods wherever possible, and buying as little as possible in general (though that's not much of a change).
I haven't either, but in recent years I really want to buy local as much as possible. I want the local farms/food producers to continue to exist. If shit hits the fan, they'll still be around and will be more relevant than ever.
Well, I don't really have the money to buy much of anything these days. But any dreams of getting a new e-bike in the near future are dashed, that's for damn sure. This broken heap with a quarter-battery charge will have to last me a few more years.
I'm in the PNW and am purchasing local as much as I can. Thankfully we have a lot of agriculture and general food production. A lot of it isn't much more expensive compared to corporate garbage.
Some things are much more expensive, like peppers and tomatoes in winter. The "local" stuff comes from Canada because they built up a shit ton of greenhouses that can grow year-round. Tariffs make these even more expensive.
If the US wants to "fix" this and domestically produce the stuff we could have simply provided federal government grants/incentives. Instead we pissed off our trading partners.
People do give away perfectly usable computers when they buy new ones. You have no idea if that person bought, found, stole, borrowed or was gifted a device.