Posted on 05/13/2017 9:10:35 PM PDT by grey_whiskers
What do flat-earthers and economists have in common?
They both mistake their models for reality. They confuse what ought to be with what is.
And thats why economists are often wrongeven when they all agree, like when it comes to global free trade.
Ask 10 economists about global free trade, and 10 will say its good. Always good.
(Excerpt) Read more at nationaleconomicseditorial.com ...
I sometimes think that the entire C-level suites (and their families, heirs, and assigns) of most Fortune 500 companies should be sold into slavery to make reparations for what they've done.
Or, we could just follow Shakespeare and hang all the lawyers first thing...
Chinese appliances now. 3-5 year life spans.
Old fridge or washer/dryer would last 20-30 years.
Total ripoff!
He is comparing apples to oranges. His 2017 prices are for upper tier. You can get cheaper with more features than in 1976.
appliances are built to fall apart now too. It’s called “shortening the replacement cycle” or “planned obsolescence”. Everything you buy has a fatal flaw incorporated into its design which ensures that the product will become unusable at some point and things are being designed to fall apart faster and faster. Americans ought to be furious about this.
“Chinese appliances now. 3-5 year life spans.”
All of our appliances are on year six with no problems.
how many features do you really need? More features just means more things to break and a shorter replacement cycle.
“Old fridge or washer/dryer would last 20-30 years.”
My mother’s fridge is on year 17.
My GE washer is a 1976, my GE dryer is a 1973, still going strong. New appliances are junk. I know what I’m talking about, I was a GE service tech for 31 years until last October.
As a result of the sale to the Chinese I was eligible to take my pension early and I got out. Couldn’t stand trying to explain why the product sucked.
You’re doing well then.
I have a fridge and was told by a Sears repairman that they and washer/dryers are made to last 3-5 years.
Then they stop manufacturing the darn parts to make sure they’ll be obsolete.
I have an older one that’s like a tank. Never replacing it.
they actually have obsolescence departments now that work day and night to figure out how to shorten the life of a product
So basically when someone asks someone who does that work what they do for a job the answer, if honest is “I try to make products way more expensive for people by shortening the product’s lifespan”
“how many features do you really need? More features just means more things to break and a shorter replacement cycle.”
You can do your wash in the sink!
Thanks for chiming in.
Sad, too, because that’s a MAJOR expense to the average family trying to replace that.
Then Sears pushes the charge account - 18% interest.
This article describes planned obsolescence, but misidentifies it as a problem with international trade. I just wish one manufacturer — and I don’t care if that manufacturer is located in South Bend or South Korea — would reject planned obsolescence and manufacture appliances meant to last 30 years.
we replaced a washing machine and an oven that were both 37 years old a few years ago and I have an original coke machine in my kitchen made that is well over 50 years old and is still running like a champ. It can freeze a beer in fact. The only things that are made that well these days are firearms IMO. appliances? definitely not.
Like I just said, we recently replaced a 37 year old washing machine. It had all the features you could want and the best feature of all, we didn’t have to replace it for 37 years.
Ditto. We had a stove for 30+ years. If it’s working, why replace it?
Americans are making less money and are broker. Welcome to globalism...
Notice it says “assembled in the USA”. The parts are still crap from China. GE does the same thing. Assembled here from crap from elsewhere.
When I started with GE in 1985 we made every part, wiring, fan motors, elements, valves, everything was GE. Now they are just assembled with parts from Indonesia, China, Mexico, etc.
He points out that: “Although most appliances are assembled in America, their made in America stickers are totally worthless,” then he concludes: “Help fix the economy, and do yourself a favor. Buy American.”
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