I’ve tried to listen to Levin since the election. I can’t do it for long. He refuses to understand what globalization has wrought upon manufacturing and as a consequence the middle class.
If regulations on manufacturing are required in this country, then imported manufactured goods should have the same burden levied upon them. To not do so is to encourage every factory to move to mexico that can possibly relocate.
I don’t like that Carrier needed cajoling and tax incentives. give the same treatment to every manufacturer. rationalize regulations. Let them grow here, not encourage them to grow somewhere else.
Levin has a track record now of ignoring the obvious.
I suggest that Levin will experience his own consequences of economic authoritarianism from his advertisers as he chases his audience away and is left with fanboys and bitter supporters of those defeated in the primaries.
I can’t listen to you, my man. You keep telling me how stupid I must be for realizing how stupid you are on economic issues.
He is the Denali of disappointments.
Iif regulations on manufacturing are required in this country, then imported manufactured goods should have the same burden levied upon them.`
That is such an important and key point that it bares repeating. The same arguement could also be applied to energy extraction and the environmental burdens that are placed on domestic producers but tolerated from abroad.
“He refuses to understand what globalization has wrought upon manufacturing ...”
You mean what unions have wrought.
And union-supported politicians.
Right here. To have American companies compete on an even playing field is a foreign concept to globalists. Such a base concept.