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America’s Descent Into the Third World
Chronicles Magazine ^ | Monday, July 25, 2005 | Paul Craig Roberts

Posted on 07/27/2005 6:21:50 AM PDT by A. Pole

The June payroll jobs report did not receive much attention due to the July 4 holiday, but the depressing 21st century job performance of the U.S. economy continues unabated.

Only 144,000 private sector jobs were created, each one of which was in domestic services.

Fifty-six thousand jobs were created in professional and business services, about half of which are in administrative and waste services.

Thirty-eight thousand jobs were created in education and health services, almost all of which are in health care and social assistance.

Nineteen thousand jobs were created in leisure and hospitality, almost all of which are waitresses and bartenders.

Membership associations and organizations created 10,000 jobs, and repair and maintenance created 4,000 jobs.

Financial activities created 16,000 jobs.

This most certainly is not the labor market profile of a First World country, much less a superpower.

Where are the jobs for this year’s crop of engineering and science graduates?

U.S. manufacturing lost another 24,000 jobs in June. A country that doesn’t manufacture doesn’t need many engineers. And the few engineering jobs available go to foreigners.

Readers have sent me employment listings from U.S. software development firms. The listings are discriminatory against American citizens. One ad from a company in New Jersey that is a developer for many companies, including Oracle, specifies that the applicant must have a TN visa.

A TN or Trade NAFTA visa is what is given to Mexicans and Canadians who are willing to work in the United States at below prevailing wages.

Another ad from a software consulting company based in Omaha, Neb., specifies it wants software engineers who are H-1B transferees. What this means is that the firm is advertising for foreigners already in the United States who have H-1B work visas.

The reason the U.S. firms specify that they have employment opportunities only for foreigners who hold work visas is because the foreigners will work for less than the prevailing U.S. salary.

Gentle reader, when you read allegations that there is a shortage of engineers in America, necessitating the importation of foreigners to do the work, you are reading a bald-faced lie. If there were a shortage of American engineers, employers would not word their job listings to read that no American need apply and that they are offering jobs only to foreigners holding work visas.

What kind of country gives preference to foreigners over its own engineering graduates?

What kind of country destroys the job market for its own citizens?

How much longer will parents shell out $100,000 for a college education for a son or daughter who ends up employed as a bartender, waitress or temp?


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To: durasell
Cheer up, there's still Hillary! (it was a joke, a joke, okay?)

OK, now you've done it. I'm wiping up soda from my keyboard from bursting out laughing over that one.

501 posted on 07/30/2005 10:21:10 AM PDT by Marathoner
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To: pfony1
The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists is a long-standing hyper liberal anti-U.S. defense operation. They always exaggerate our nuclear assets. Note how they call the conversion of 4 of the few Trident Submarines we have into non-nuclear platforms..."our older submarines"???

The don't look at vulnerability issues. Like the basing of these assets in port rather on patrol. Or the termination of Project Looking Glass operations.

502 posted on 07/30/2005 11:08:54 AM PDT by Paul Ross (George Patton: "I hate to have to fight for the same ground twice.")
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To: pfony1; GOP_1900AD; Travis McGee; Jeff Head; JohnHuang2; doug from upland
The submarines that China has developed are showing signs of being able to successfully evade our existing tracking technology. Plus, what we used to have for ASW was much better than our current capablity. It was slashed during Xlinton's administration, some historical remarks attacks below. It should be pointed out that GWB has slavishly followed Xlinton's strategic reduction roadmap to the letter...the ONLY exception being his extremely limited NMD deployments.

The newer technology we have developed is not being deployed..in any significant numbers by GWB, for all practical purposes...its as if its nonexistent. And technology on paper, is not hardware in the field where it's needed. It has been allowed to atrophy.

And if you aren't concerned about that...here is something for you to mull...why is the Administration allowing even our military's readiness for EMP attacks to atrophy...?


SUMMARY OF THE CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY HIGH-LEVEL ROUNDTABLE ON THE FUTURE OF U.S. STRATEGIC AND TACTICAL UNDERSEA FORCES

ANA Westin Hotel, Washington, D.C.

20 October 1994

INTRODUCTION

Within the next few weeks, the Congress is expected to make decisions that will bear upon the viability of the United States' undersea warfare capabilities for the foreseeable future. This will be the likely effect of pending legislative initiatives that will determine what sorts of advanced nuclear-powered submarines are manufactured in this country -- and by whom.

To answer these questions thoughtfully, a larger set of issues must be considered: What is the importance of undersea assets to deterrence and U.S. security in the post-Cold War world? What are the implications of the Clinton Administration's Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) for the Nation's sea-based deterrent? What are the technological threats -- both present and future -- to U.S. undersea forces? What impact will arms control have on future U.S. force structure options? And what, in turn, are the consequences of the responses to these questions for the U.S. submarine-building industrial base and for the costs of its products?

Anticipating the need for careful consideration of these critical issues, the Center for Security Policy on 20 October 1994 convened a day-long "High-Level Roundtable Discussion on the Future of U.S. Strategic and Tactical Undersea Forces" involving over fifty senior past and present government officials and others with considerable expertise in this field. (This Roundtable was the second in a series of such symposiums conducted by the Center on major national security issues of the day. The first, held in June 1994, dealt with the future of the manned bomber force.)

Among the participants were: former Secretaries of Defense James Schlesinger and Caspar Weinberger; the former Director of Naval Nuclear Reactors, Admiral Kinnaird McKee; former Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Vice Admiral Al Burkhalter; former Under Secretary of Defense Don Hicks; and former chief strategic arms negotiator, Ambassador Linton Brooks. (A full list of participants is attached.)

This paper briefly summarizes the key points that emerged in the course of the Center's latest Roundtable Discussion. While much of the discussion dealt with the status of the sea-based ballistic missile force, most of the observations noted below bear on the future need for competent tactical underwater capabilities, as well.

No effort was made to define or formally approve consensus positions on these topics; nor were specific recommendations adopted by the group. Nevertheless, this summary sets forth a number of points that appeared to be generally agreed upon -- and which apply directly to pending decisions concerning the viability of U.S. submarine forces and America's capacity to maintain a credible sea-based deterrent in the future.

I. FIRST PRINCIPLES: THE IMPORTANCE OF UNDERSEA ASSETS TO DETERRENCE IN THE POST-COLD WAR WORLD

The lead discussant for the first part of the day's program was Admiral Kinnaird McKee (USN, Ret.), former director of Naval Nuclear Reactors and a career submarine officer. His remarks, and the discussion that followed, focused in particular on the Clinton Administration's planned cutbacks in U.S. undersea assets in response to the recommendations contained in the Nuclear Posture Review. Highlights of the discussion included the following observations:

  • The U.S. deterrent posture has relied heavily on the undersea leg of the nuclear triad (land-based missiles, manned bombers and ballistic missile submarines) because it is difficult -- if not impossible -- for potential adversaries to detect submarines that can swiftly and without fanfare be brought to bear on trouble-spots around the world. The NPR proposes to shrink America's fleet ballistic missile submarine fleet through a program of budgetary constraints and a slow strangulation of the industrial base.

  • The submarine fleet's inherent characteristics of stealth, mobility and firepower impose a "terrible burden" of both certainty and uncertainty on potential adversaries: They are certain of the awesome destructive capability of our submarine force, but they are completely uncertain of exactly where that force is located. It provides the U.S. a great amount of tactical and strategic leverage in a variety of situations.

  • The Clinton Administration proposes to retire four ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) by 2004, ostensibly in compliance with START Treaty limits. Yet the START treaties require mutual and balanced reductions -- and Russia has yet to begin comparable reductions under START I. Neither has it ratified START II. Helping the Russians become a democracy by setting an example through unilateral restraint is not sound defense policy. In any event, the START treaties require the reduction of warheads -- not submarines.

  • Retired nuclear submarines cannot safely be "put into mothballs" as can surface ships or diesel submarines. The cost to man and maintain a nuclear submarine in storage is virtually comparable to maintaining it on active duty. As a practical matter, therefore, if budgetary constraints are not relaxed, "retired" submarines will have to be dismantled ("turned into razor blades"). There will be no way to call them back into service if the need arises at a later date.

  • The Administration is attempting to reduce the defense budget for its own reasons and blames it on treaties -- such as START II -- that are not in force yet and that may never be. The treaties are being used as a smoke screen to hide the Administration's real strategy -- cut the defense budget to conform to an illusory "deficit reduction plan," then define the threats in the rest of the world in such a way as to justify this smaller defense budget. Sound national security policy dictates that defense budgets react to the international threat environment. The Clinton Administration is attempting to conjure up a world with no threats to justify its decision to decrease defense spending.

  • Higher defense levels cannot be reconstituted quickly. If relations with Russia turn sour and we have made the cuts suggested by the NPR, it will take at least five years for the United States to regain an adequate ballistic missile submarine force structure.

  • Paying the Russians to reduce their arsenal -- as provided for in the Nunn-Lugar amendment -- has proven to be largely self-defeating: Moscow is using at least some of the funds to develop new military technology. The United States may soon be in the absurd position of are paying both for the weapons systems against which it must defend as well as bearing increased costs in order to redress the effects of U.S.-funded improvements to Russian military capabilities.

II. THE NUCLEAR POSTURE REVIEW AND THE SEA-BASED DETERRENT

The discussion then turned to a more general examination of the Nuclear Posture Review and the assumptions about current and future Russian behavior contained therein. The lead discussant for this topic was Dr. Daniel Goure, Deputy Director, Political-Military Studies, Center for Strategic and International Studies. Key points made in the course of this portion of the Roundtable included:

  • The Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) reflects a benign view of a world in which there are "problem areas," but no strategic threats to the United States. In fact, the NPR's central premise is that the U.S. and Russia currently are partners and will remain partners for the foreseeable future. The notion of using military force for strategic purposes is totally absent from the Clinton Administration's view of the world.

  • If this unrealistic view of the world is accepted, it follows that the Clinton Administration can then attempt to: stop the production of essential elements of the U.S. nuclear weapons program; curtail nuclear research and development funding; reduce the submarine industrial base to a sole-source situation; and cut the number of undersea platforms to a minimum.

  • The NPR anticipates that START Treaty compliance will require the retirement of four SSBNs and begins the budgetary strangulation that will ensure that the boats will be cut up by 2004, even if Russia is not in compliance (assuming that both START Treaties have come fully into force). If, on the other hand, the Russians do not reduce their armaments to treaty levels, the U.S. will not be able to reconstitute its submarine fleet. There is no planning or provision in the NPR for a situation in which Russia's interests diverge from our own.

  • The main problem with the NPR is that it leads irrevocably to a significant erosion of the U.S. nuclear deterrent at a time when it is not merely unclear, but unlikely, that Russia will remain a friendly, non-competitive power. The NPR provides no "hedge" against a renewed strategic threat -- whether from Russia or some other source. There needs to be a point at which the NPR's course can be reversed upon a showing that its premise of a rosy future is incorrect.

  • Russia's current program of aggressive military development is not seen by the Administration as the strategic problem -- the potential threat to the nation's security -- that it is. Rather, it is regarded merely as an inconvenience, something that gets in the way of the supposed U.S.-Russian "partnership." The fact that the Russian defense industry is building new, better weapons is seen as a problem of "inadequate defense conversion" rather than as deliberate, not to say threatening, Russian military planning.

  • Moreover, the NPR cripples deterrence by setting building and reduction priorities that ensure degradation of U.S. capabilities: The United States is continuing vigorous production in areas where it has the capability to surge production in the event of crisis (e.g., aircraft) and reducing -- if not destroying -- production capability in the one area where protracted lead-times require steady, long-term commitment (e.g., nuclear submarines).

  • Before the U.S. embarks on the cutbacks envisioned in the NPR, the Clinton Administration needs to ask the following questions: What evidence do we have that Russia is currently engaged in or is planning to implement substantial reductions in its nuclear capabilities? Does the NPR really permit the U.S. to reverse its course of nuclear reductions and reconstitute its capabilities if Russia does not reduce? Is the United States realistically going to be in a position to reconstitute its nuclear forces if Russia fails to ratify START II?

III. THE FUTURE THREAT TO U.S. UNDERSEA FORCES

The lead discussants in the third segment of the Roundtable were Vice Admiral Al Burkhalter, former Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, and Anthony Battista, a former, long-time Professional Staff Member of the House Armed Services Committee. They led an animated discussion of current and future developments in Russia and around the world that may give rise to serious challenges to U.S. undersea forces. Among the highlights of this segment's discussion were the following points:

  • There are two direct threats to the U.S. undersea force: (1) an undiminished -- and improving -- Russian submarine development program; and (2) the proliferation of state-of-the-art diesel submarines, most often sold by Russia to dangerous countries in regions of strategic interest to the U.S. (e.g., Northeast Asia, the Persian Gulf, Latin America, etc.)

  • The Russian "bear" might be sleeping, but it is certainly not dead. A fourth generation Russian submarine with capabilities that may outshine the best American subs is expected to be launched shortly. This indicates that, in spite of the chaotic state of the Russian economy, Russian military technological development has not ceased. Indeed, as the U.S. reduces its submarine building schedule to, at best, one sub every one-and-a-half years, Russia continues to build at a rate of two-to-three submarines per year. Evidently, their nuclear shipbuilding base retains a high priority both within the military sector and vis a vis the domestic economy.

  • By contrast, the vulnerability of the U.S. submarine fleet is growing as its numbers diminish. Moreover, Russian anti-submarine warfare (ASW) capabilities -- particularly in the field of synthetic aperture radar -- are increasing at the same time that U.S. ASW capabilities are being severely constrained by shrinking R&D and procurement budgets.

  • While the U.S. submarine fleet remains overall better, quieter and faster than its Russian counterpart, the gap is closing rapidly. Russia will shortly have -- if it does not already have -- comparable capabilities in a large number of submarines and a significantly larger fleet.

  • There seems to be a state of denial in the Administration concerning Russian submarine developments -- as the Russians continue to advance, we are cutting submarine research and development funds. The Administration wishes the Russian threat away because of budget concerns.

  • Although diesel submarines can be used to fight so-called "brown water navies" such as those found in the Third World, and are substantially cheaper than nuclear subs, they are no substitute for nuclear submarines because they cannot rapidly travel long distances from port submerged and cannot remain on station for long periods of time, ready to exploit an opportunity indefinitely.

IV. ARMS CONTROL AND FUTURE U.S. FORCE STRUCTURE OPTIONS

This segment of the Roundtable featured a presentation by Sven Kraemer, former Director for Arms Control on the National Security Council, and remarks by Ambassador Linton Brooks, chief U.S. negotiator for the START II Treaty. Among the key points made in the course of this part of the discussion were the following:

  • The NPR does not identify Russia as an arena of potential conflict to which U.S. forces must be able to respond. NPR advocates conclude that if Russia is no longer a threat, then the defense platforms, built during the Cold War to counter that threat must no longer be essential to our defense. The trouble with this analysis is that the assumptions about the diminished Russian threat are not being borne out by Russia's stated intentions or U.S. intelligence evidence. The Administration is neither listening to the intelligence community nor crediting Russian statements as reflecting their intentions.

  • The bottom line is that the Russian threat is real and largely undiminished. It is being ignored by the Clinton Administration. The U.S. is eroding its security posture in a period when it faces more instability, not less.

  • A prime example of failing to make provision for the future in the face of a continued threat is the Clinton Administration's policy concerning an essential element for the safety and reliability of nuclear weapons -- tritium. The Energy Department has closed the only tritium-source reactor for safety reasons without making provision to build a substitute. It will take ten years to build a new tritium reactor. The U.S. will run out of usable tritium in about that time. Thereafter, a significant portion of America's most modern nuclear weapons will become unreliable and/or unusable.

  • As the United States continues to denuclearize, it is losing valuable nuclear expertise, expertise which will be necessary -- but, unfortunately, nonexistent -- should it have to meet a nuclear threat in the future.

  • The Clinton Administration is basing defense budget decisions on the assumption that START II is going to be implemented in Russia. What has not been discussed candidly is the fact that the United States may not be able to turn back if START II is never fully implemented.

V. INDUSTRIAL BASE AND AFFORDABILITY ISSUES

The lead discussant for the final segment concerning the condition of and prospects for America's nuclear submarine production base and the options for building affordable nuclear subs was Bob Gillcash, Legislative Assistant for National Security Affairs to Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT). Among the noteworthy points made in the course of this segment were the following:

  • The Administration is allowing the budgeteers to define force structure. That is, rather than beginning by defining the threats and the mission requirements to meet those threats followed by budgeting to fulfill the missions, the Administration is designing the missions to suit the budget.

  • In the absence of sound strategic planning, the Navy is losing the ability to produce submarines. Vendors and contractors are taking themselves out -- or are being forced out -- of competition for government contracts. The industrial base is being ignored in decision-making about the needs of the submarine fleet. Because of the budgetary restraints being imposed by the Clinton Administration, the Navy is no longer making long-term investment decisions essential to preserve an effective underwater fleet and the industrial infrastructure needed to support it.

  • The industrial base is not simply a system to build submarines. To be viable, it must also be a system for repairing and maintaining them and for developing the next generation of undersea combatants.

  • In the period 1982-1991, the United States produced 37 submarines; in the period 1992-2001, only four U.S. submarines are planned, and that could fall to three. This represents a 90% drop in production. As a result, skilled welders, nuclear engineers, naval architects and other specialists in submarine production are moving into the civilian sector. Many of them will be unavailable to build the next generation of nuclear submarines when they are needed. The fall-off in capability in the submarine sector is faster than in other military/industrial sectors because of the drastic reduction in construction.

  • Moreover, low production rates mean higher per-unit costs. A prime example of this phenomenon is the UK submarine construction program, which is so slow -- one ship every two years -- that there is no competition for component supply: Each component has only one supplier, creating a monopoly allowing the supplier to charge the government the highest price possible.

  • By 2010, even if the United States manages to produce between one and two nuclear submarines per year, the number of decommissioned ships will overtake the number of those in production. The U.S. will not be able to meet the final force structure numbers contained in the Administration's own Bottom-up Review.

CONCLUSION

Taken as a whole, the Center's Roundtable Discussion on the future of the submarine force made a powerful case for an immediate course correction concerning U.S. sea-based deterrent and associated industrial capabilities. As the American submarine fleet includes the most survivable leg of the Nuclear Triad and many of the Nation's most flexible and potent war-fighting instruments, the size and condition of this force must not be allowed to deteriorate to the point where its credibility, utility and/or survivability are imperilled.

It follows from this discussion that the United States cannot afford to disregard the need for a robust and highly competitive industrial base to support its future undersea war fighting needs. In the face of available information about the present and emerging threat, there can be little doubt that further erosion of U.S. capability to design, develop and manufacture advanced nuclear-powered submarines would be unacceptable.

Center for Security Policy
1920 L Street,N.W.
Suite 210
Washington, DC 20036
E-mail the Center

503 posted on 07/30/2005 2:46:09 PM PDT by Paul Ross (George Patton: "I hate to have to fight for the same ground twice.")
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To: pfony1
Some further links to check out the EMP Threat and here.

March 8, 2005 "Terrorism and the EMP Threat to Homeland Security "
Senate Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Homeland Security
http://judiciary.senate.gov/hearing.cfm?id=1404

Senator Kyl's Opening Statement (pdf, 14K) - see also below http://kyl.senate.gov/legis_center/subdocs/030805_jk_opening.pdf

PANEL I
Dr. Lowell Wood, Acting Chairman, Commission to Assess the Threat to the U.S. From Electomagnetic Pulse Attack (pdf, 19K) - see also below http://kyl.senate.gov/legis_center/subdocs/030805_wood.pdf

Dr. Peter Pry, Senior Staff, Congressional EMP Commission, Washington, DC (pdf, 19K) - see also below http://kyl.senate.gov/legis_center/subdocs/030805_pry.pdf

Dr. Peter Fonash, National Communications System Deputy Manager (Acting), Department of Homeland Security, Washington, DC (pdf, 33K) - see also below http://kyl.senate.gov/legis_center/subdocs/030805_fonash.pdf

504 posted on 07/30/2005 2:56:17 PM PDT by Paul Ross (George Patton: "I hate to have to fight for the same ground twice.")
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To: Fury

Ping for later read...


505 posted on 07/30/2005 3:00:43 PM PDT by Fury
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To: fallujah-nuker; GOP_1900AD
This report is by the same people at the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists who constantly understated Soviet missile forces, and exaggerated what our Minuteman missile force and Poseidon missile force could do to the Soviets after a Soviet first strike. They fought Reagan's build-up tooth-and-nail as "overkill" "unnecessary" "provocative" "destabilizing" or a "first strike threat".

Needless to say, Reagan's buildup was NONE of that. It was always an essential, and necessary counter to the Soviet's first-strike ambitions. And one that the Russians may still have lurking under wraps in Putin's noggin. We have reduced our Tridents by 30%. We have reduced our MX's by 100%. The Russians meanwhile, have reduced their SS-18s by....5%. Which reduction is comprised of a couple filmed "show piece" silo-destructions, and the missiles that were therein used for launching satellites. But the rest are staying put until the year 2017...

God, I wish John Bolton who negotiated this Moscow treaty that implemented this unilateral U.S. reduction (so far) could speak openly without political restraints imposed on him by GWB. I suspect he would have a lot to say.

506 posted on 07/30/2005 3:05:37 PM PDT by Paul Ross (George Patton: "I hate to have to fight for the same ground twice.")
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To: fallujah-nuker
Make the B-1 a dual use bomber, nuclear and conventional

They already did. It is primarily conventional nowadays.

507 posted on 07/30/2005 3:06:46 PM PDT by Paul Ross (George Patton: "I hate to have to fight for the same ground twice.")
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To: chimera
<And please, people, spare us the routine FR bromides about "it's their own fault for choosing the wrong field", or "start your own business, you lazy bum". For a student looking to start an academic program, that kind of crap is not the kind of thing that will encourage them.

True chimera. A bunch of socialist cr-p.

American workers (that means all working other than self-employed) are slightly overpaid. That's all. A correction in wages will occur and restore the balance.

Finally, you never learned the value of education: when choosing a field of study, one does not prepare for a job --- one prepares to learn to think and for future employment, not a particular job.

508 posted on 07/30/2005 3:20:24 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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To: Submariner; navyvet

Pinging. See above from 1995.


509 posted on 07/30/2005 3:21:51 PM PDT by Paul Ross (George Patton: "I hate to have to fight for the same ground twice.")
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To: Maria S
Thank you, Maria, for restoring some sanity on this board.

When it comes to economics, it's foreigners fault, Bush's fault. Everyone is guilty but ME.

The U.S. economy is in better shape than it has ever been. Those that don't get reveal how much they know about their own country. And, if the best economy is not good enough, they should move to a socialist country.

IN any case, they should not impose socialism on us.

510 posted on 07/30/2005 3:23:40 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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To: oldbrowser
You are absolutely correct in most of what you said, but I happen to disagree with this statement: Before we only had to compete against other Americans, now we have to compete against the world.

We have ALWAYS competed in the world economy, but we were winning. Our wages and work ethics were in line with what we produced, and it guaranteed our victory.

Now we have a nation of whiners who had it for too long too good. People expect all sorts of benefits from employers as well as high salary -- out of proportion with what they produce. Nobody saves for medical care, but the TV sets, worth thousands of dollars, are flying out of stores in a hurry. Nobody cared to learn a foreign language --- a few hundred bucks for a course in a local community college --- but average house is 40% bigger than in 1950s (while the family is smaller by a factor of 2, which makes housing per person about 3 times greater). And all complain that they are "just trying to make ends meet." All of the above --- unreasonably high demands for salary and benefits, especially the latter -- make our labor unreasonably expensive. That's all.

511 posted on 07/30/2005 3:30:25 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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To: GingisK
Yet, it is difficult to find a decent job in the field now.

The difficulty in finding a job is purely because they are no longer available; however, they were bountiful merely five years ago. The difference is that American companies, practicing the "United We Stand" mantra, have sent the jobs offshore.

There is no question that you are one of the most qualified people in your field. Perhaps, the next book you buy should be not of Java or data structures but economics.

Has it occurred to you that you may be overpriced?

512 posted on 07/30/2005 3:32:36 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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To: brownsfan
American companies around that time period began to de-emphasize R&D and strategic plans in favor of tactical moves and quarterly profits. Perhaps in response to added pressure from the public?

This is simply not true. Every (at least medium-sizd) company has a strategic plan. R&D spending is cyclical but it has always been there. Finally, the mass movement into stock market, as you put it, could only help employment and expansion, not hurt it.

513 posted on 07/30/2005 3:34:57 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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To: ExitPurgamentum
The U.S. economy is in better shape than it has ever been.

Not from a defense standpoint. And that's the one that matters with Red China fuming death and nuclear destruction if we don't get out of their way. And even if we do, in ignominious boot-licking appeasement...we just may get destroyed anyways. Appeasement never works. It just emboldens the appetite of the monsters.

So, Thanks Phony Free Traders...I really needed a nuclear sunburn!

Oh, and Red China loves you, velly, velly much!

IN any case, they should not impose socialism on us.

LOL! Wait til you see what's in store for you from your friends in Bejing (who, btw, subsidize their exporting partnerships, oppress their populations movement, wages, and contractual rights...and oh, yeah, impose 27% tariffs on most all U.S. manufactures)(And don't bother trying to stay Christian anymore, that will soon go the way of Falun Gong).

514 posted on 07/30/2005 3:35:24 PM PDT by Paul Ross (George Patton: "I hate to have to fight for the same ground twice.")
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To: guitfiddlist

So what does it prove?


515 posted on 07/30/2005 3:35:48 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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To: dennisw

Yeh, but totally bogus and ignorant.


516 posted on 07/30/2005 3:36:26 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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To: Paul Ross

My understanding was that they are now only tasked with delivery of conventional weapons, they should be able to both, and the crews kept proficient for both.

I agree with your assessment of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientist, the MSM always fawned over their grandstanding by adjusting their "doomsday clock" in response to something the US would do, like deploying the MX, but never to what the USSR did.


517 posted on 07/30/2005 3:37:28 PM PDT by fallujah-nuker (Atque ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appelant)
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To: ExitPurgamentum
Now we have a nation of whiners

Stop your whining!

Especially about your fellow Americans! Ingrate.

BTW: The purpose of the U.S. Constitution was to "form a more perfect union."

So, do you support the U.S. Constitution...or don't you?

518 posted on 07/30/2005 3:38:42 PM PDT by Paul Ross (George Patton: "I hate to have to fight for the same ground twice.")
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To: superiorslots
American workers are the smartest and most productive of any workers in the world and that is a proven fact.

This is silly: the fact that hiring is done elsewhere proves the opposite.

We are losing jobs because corporations are going after cheap labor. Hard to compete with an 88 cent per hour job in china no matter what your education level maybe.

Why is this hard, and why is this happening now, then? Chinese labor has always been there. American companies have always been guided by knowledgeable people, so they couldn't have missed that fact. Why is increase in outsourcing now?

519 posted on 07/30/2005 3:39:17 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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To: iconoclast
What kind of human being relishes sacrificing his fellow Americans to satisfy their own short sighted ideology?

This is NOT what's happening, my fiend. Fellow Americans that offer themselves for hire make unreasonable demand on their other fellow Americans that take business risks. Now, what kind of human being would do that?

520 posted on 07/30/2005 3:41:01 PM PDT by ExitPurgamentum
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