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Jobs creating a strong working middle class = racism?

Psychos. We need to export more “experts.”

(Posted as vanity as not a full source ‘news’ story yet and unlikely to be one.)

1 posted on 10/08/2022 6:32:56 AM PDT by TigerClaws
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To: TigerClaws

CATO has long advocated for the de-industrialization of the US given its overall globalist agenda.


2 posted on 10/08/2022 6:34:39 AM PDT by cranked
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To: TigerClaws

That’s from the Cato Institute? Boy, libertarians sound like leftist racists these days.


3 posted on 10/08/2022 6:35:54 AM PDT by ConservativeInPA ( Scratch a leftist and you'll find a fascist )
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To: TigerClaws

Another Harvard genius.


4 posted on 10/08/2022 6:37:50 AM PDT by EEGator
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To: TigerClaws
When you've run out of every rational argument, or never had any, resort to accusation of racism.

5 posted on 10/08/2022 6:38:39 AM PDT by BitWielder1 (I'd rather have Unequal Wealth than Equal Poverty.)
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To: TigerClaws

My guess is that Adam Posen won’t be voting for Trump.


7 posted on 10/08/2022 6:43:52 AM PDT by silent majority rising
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To: TigerClaws

Checked his bio and he is definitely a ‘fat boy’ from the Washington DC Dung pile.


9 posted on 10/08/2022 6:45:57 AM PDT by silent majority rising
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To: TigerClaws

“He says a focus on domestic manufacturing is simply a “fetish for keeping white males with low education in the powerful positions they are in.”

This is what the Martha’s Vineyard crowd believes.
And they know more than we do. That’s why they have to be in charge and force 100 miles to the charge electric cars on us.


10 posted on 10/08/2022 6:47:55 AM PDT by HereInTheHeartland (Have you seen Joe Biden's picture on a milk carton?)
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To: TigerClaws

The idiots are making racism sound imperative.


11 posted on 10/08/2022 6:52:31 AM PDT by GingisK
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To: TigerClaws
So he's calling the Democrats racists for the CHIPS and Science Act.

It's rare that I agree with the current crop of Democrats on anything, but I'll support the CHIPS and Science Act over this nonsense.

But that doesn't mean I'll forget they obstructed President Trump in his efforts to bring American manufacturing back and vote for them either.

12 posted on 10/08/2022 6:53:10 AM PDT by TwelveOfTwenty (Will whoever keeps asking if this country can get any more insane please stop?)
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To: TigerClaws

The mask or veneer is long off.

All their attack words ... racism, sexism, equity, (insert word here) justice, (anything)-phobic ... all mean one thing.

The thing they’re attacking is good for Americans and for everyone. The thing they want instead benefits communists and would-be elites and harms everyone.

There’s no point in ‘debating’ on each issue because that’s the beginning and end of their philosophy. All the facts are on our side, truth is on our side, but laboriously refuting their BS is one of the ways they get us wasting our time while they concentrate on the more important things like actually achieving their goals and rigging elections so that truth and public opinion become irrelevant.

Since there’s no sense in their approach, the effective response is not engaging in the marketplace of ideas, or well-minded refutations, but mockery, satire, and ridicule. Thus the efficacy of ‘meme wars.’

If you want an analogy, we occupy the high ground of truth like a sentry on a wall. They’re busy sapping under the wall to collapse it. The way to take out sappers is to counter-sap — messy, dirty, underground, effective.


13 posted on 10/08/2022 6:55:24 AM PDT by No.6
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To: TigerClaws
Making people work for a living has been racist since a government check in every mailbox, a Covid vaccine in every arm, an illegal alien in every neighborhood .........

The only thing that can cure this racism is a daily bus of illegal aliens into every democrat controlled city, state, town in the United States. It's possible to do because the flow of illegals is the only supply chain that Biden hasn't disrupted.

14 posted on 10/08/2022 6:55:26 AM PDT by hflynn
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To: TigerClaws

Common sense shows that when you manufacture as many goods that your nation consumes it generates multiple other avenues for businesses such as food/fuel/automotive/roads etc...and keeps money and employment opportunities open to any that want to work. Must be easy to spew such idiocy when you are paid to ponder without generating anything tangible.


16 posted on 10/08/2022 6:57:55 AM PDT by mythenjoseph
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To: TigerClaws

Total commie. Walking stereotype. Every single time.

RITHOLTZ: Yes. Couldn’t agree more. No one country has a monopoly on good ideas and we certainly should borrow freely.

Our final question, what do you know about the world of economics, international relations, politics today that you wish you knew 25 or so years ago when your career was just ramping up?

POSEN: You were kind enough to send me a list of questions. This one was the hardest one, actually, for me to think about ahead of time. I don’t know why because it’s perfectly reasonable question.

I guess the main thing that I wish I had known 20 years or 25 years ago that I didn’t was just frankly to be more woke, that how much, despite my liberalism and fancy education and attempted objectivity, I had overlooked a lot of the fundamental injustices in the world and I had overlooked a lot of our history and I am very ashamed to this day of how late I was to waking up to some of them.

RITHOLTZ: That’s really interesting. We’re recording this on election day, so we don’t know what the outcome is. But arguably, the reaction of much of the public to not just the racial injustice and the killing of unarmed African-American males or anyone for that matter, but the police response to peaceful protest, I think a lot of people who were not, quote-unquote, “woke” were very much shocked by that behavior.

POSEN: Yes.

RITHOLTZ: It’s not what you think of when you think of as America, at least in privileged wealthy white society. It’s not what you think of …

POSEN: Exactly. And I’m just so ashamed of that. I remember — I mean, obviously it matters much more to save innocent people’s lives than whether I’m ashamed or not ashamed about that, but I am ashamed of it. I remember one of the first times I went abroad which was in 1990. I went to a conference for economic students in Italy, a bizarre conference but got me there.

Anyway, and I remember talking with somebody who was from Spain and this person was saying to me, you Americans think you’re so free, when I was there, the state police are walking around like the fascist we used to have in doing this and that. And I remember being horrified that he could say such a thing and how could I think — how could he think that? He must be totally wrong.

And I had always made the comfortable assumption, yes, if you’re black or even Jewish, you don’t want to be driving alone in Alabama, sure. But overtime, it’s all going away. And that was, obviously, totally oblivious to the reality of life for, particularly, black males but all kinds of people in the U.S. And the behavior of police.

And it’s just- we don’t know as you just said, if election day, we don’t know what’s going to happen but I hope, whoever wins, we have to try to be more just and not kill innocent people. It shouldn’t be that hard.

https://ritholtz.com/2020/11/transcript-adam-posen/


17 posted on 10/08/2022 7:00:37 AM PDT by Tom in SFCA
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To: TigerClaws

It is to boggle the mind.

So, bringing the jobs back to the United States is “racism”. How is that, exactly? Taking jobs away from the “persons of color” who reside in another country ALTOGETHER? How about making available good-paying local jobs for “people of color” who live right here in the United States as US citizens?

And while you are concerned so much about skin pigmentation, white is a color, and yes, white lives matter, as so famously made known by Kanye West.


18 posted on 10/08/2022 7:00:41 AM PDT by alloysteel (A born skeptic is now living in a target-rich environment. SO many beliefs to challenge...)
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To: TigerClaws

Like crabs in a bucket.


23 posted on 10/08/2022 7:17:30 AM PDT by bk1000 (Banned from Breitbart)
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To: TigerClaws

Manufacturing has always provided opportunities for the poor and undereducated to rise to the middle class. Perhaps Posner’s ignorance extends to history. In the 20th century millions of poor blacks chained to the sharecropper system migrated to northern and midwestern cities to take jobs in factories.

Textile and apparel jobs for the first 3/4 of the 20th century provided steady work in rural southern counties, allowing whites and blacks to escape the poverty of farm laborers who were not landowners.

A revitalized manufacturing economy will permit unskilled victims of America’s failed public education system to learn valuable skills on the job which will bring them economic success and escape dependency on the welfare state.

Likely Posner opposes shifting education funds from worthless liberal arts majors to vocational education as racist as well. In his mind it is better for the government to give someone (any race) $200,000 to obtain a degree in transgender studies than spend $25,000 to train an electrician, plumber, mechanic, cabinetmaker, or lab technician who can find productive work, delivering a middle class lifestyle, immediately upon graduation.


25 posted on 10/08/2022 7:27:25 AM PDT by Soul of the South (The past is gone and cannot be changed. Tomorrow can be a better day if we work o)
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To: TigerClaws

White males with “low education” - trying to feed their families and keep a roof over their heads is considered “racism.”

And Democrats wonder why the White Working Class no longer votes for them.


26 posted on 10/08/2022 7:29:28 AM PDT by Bon of Babble (Rigged Elections have Consequences)
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To: TigerClaws

Does he mean the kind of jobs that my father, and pretty much every other man in my town had, that allowed them to support their wives and children? The kind of jobs in which they helped make something useful and valuable every day? Those kinds of jobs?


29 posted on 10/08/2022 7:49:19 AM PDT by Southside_Chicago_Republican (The more I learn about people, the more I like my dog. )
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To: TigerClaws
Power is a fat neckbeard with no wife at 56 years of age.
32 posted on 10/08/2022 7:55:47 AM PDT by StAnDeliver (Tanned, rested, and ready.)
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To: TigerClaws

I guess we can all eat and drive the electronic scribblings of Cato “thinkers”. Perhaps the author is still butthurt because working class white boys pushed him down on the playground and ruined his Lord Fontleroy suit.

Can this “expert” not know that large numbers of blacks, hispanics, and other “minorities” have manufacturing jobs, and that this has been a great path to family stability and building multi-generational wealth? Gainful employment is an anti-racist social program. Is that so bad that we are better off with everyone being unemployed? The weak links of “globalization” ought to be obvious (Covid, supply chain breakdown, energy shortages and price manipulation, etc.).

I like the libertarian emphasis on personal freedom and choice, but atomization is not a workable basis for governing a large, complex society. There has a to be a balance between macro and micro scale interests. The US COnstitution is a framework for exactly that process.


33 posted on 10/08/2022 8:10:04 AM PDT by Chewbarkah
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