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To: Kaslin

“We’ve given up our role as the manufacturing colossus, which blinds us to the reality that the times, they are a-changing — again.

“For decades,” writes James Fallows in The Atlantic magazine, “every trend in manufacturing favored the developing world and worked against the United States. But new tools that greatly speed up development from idea to finished product encourage startup companies to locate here, not in Asia.”

She starts with an incorrect premise. The USA’s manufacturing decline was greatly overplayed because the decine was in unionized employment. Manufacturing output as measured by gross value has remained steady. However the level of employment has decreased dramatically.

Our challenges are not the Chinese or any third world sweatshop they are from self inflicted wounds based on our policices in trade, energy, enviromental, legal, labor, monetary, and etc..


3 posted on 12/14/2012 6:39:24 AM PST by FreedomNotSafety
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To: FreedomNotSafety
Our challenges are not the Chinese or any third world sweatshop they are from self inflicted wounds based on our policices in trade, energy, enviromental, legal, labor, monetary, and etc..

Offshoring our manufacturing base was a form of long term economic suicide. So you advocate economic euthanasia for the US economy. What a hero.

4 posted on 12/14/2012 6:44:17 AM PST by central_va ( I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: FreedomNotSafety

the largest problem we have is not union labor, or trade polices..

It is government regulation and interference...


14 posted on 12/14/2012 8:21:50 AM PST by joe fonebone (The clueless... they walk among us, and they vote...)
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