Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

A Plan to Save American Manufacturing
TradeAlert.org ^ | Wednesday, December 31, 2003 | Kevin L. Kearns, Alan Tonelson, and William Hawkins

Posted on 01/01/2004 9:04:11 AM PST by Willie Green

For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.

Although warnings about the crisis engulfing American manufacturing have been intensifying for months, the sector´s woes continue to be significantly underestimated – certainly by official Washington and even by many manufacturers themselves.  In fact, despite the current boost in growth fueled by deficit spending, tax cuts, mortgage re-financings, and other one-time stimuli, the decline of American manufacturing is fast nearing the point of irreversibility – at least from the standpoint of restoring a critical mass of industries producing in the United States to world leadership.

The nation, in short, faces a manufacturing emergency. Unless drastic measures are taken quickly, this emergency will turn the United States into a second-class manufacturing power, greatly diminishing its own future economic prospects. Further, national security and flexibility in foreign affairs will be severely compromised.  Finally, the international imbalances being created by the manufacturing crisis will likely push the world into a major dollar crisis and could cause a protracted depression.

In part, the manufacturing crisis reflects the economy´s latest cyclical downturn and the deflating of the bubble of the 1990s.  Likewise, the manufacturing employment portion of the crisis stems in part from the increases in productivity in recent years.  But neither of these factors sufficiently explains the root cause of manufacturing´s current troubles, which are the worst by many measures since the end of World War II, and that is the cumulative and continuing effects of two decades of misguided, ill-advised, and weak-willed U.S. trade and globalization policies.

During this period, Washington has consistently failed to open foreign consumption markets adequately to U.S. producers – despite years of promises and the fanfare that greeted each new trade agreement.  In addition, the American government has failed miserably to combat predatory foreign trade practices aimed at undermining U.S. producers in their home market.  Perversely, Washington has responded to these failures by encouraging U.S. manufacturers to supply their home market from low-cost third world production platforms like Mexico and China. And most U.S. multinational corporations, and indeed some of their smaller suppliers, have responded with enthusiasm.

NO TIME TO LOSE

The most serious global macroeconomic dangers stemming from the continued flight of American manufacturing overseas have to date been avoided and may be postponed still further by continued financial policy legerdemain – though the faster America´s international debts keep rising, the more difficult the challenge of correcting the imbalances. But regardless of when the crunch actually comes, the weakening of domestic manufacturing is already undermining the material foundations of American national success.

The prolonged wage slump triggered by the overseas migration of America´s best-paying jobs on average has been rippling through the U.S. economy and American society for at least two decades.  The loss of these important jobs represents a shrinking of the employment base needed for a middle-class standard of living, stable families, and the local and state tax revenues necessary for a first-world level of responsibly financed public infrastructure and social services. Consequently, Americans find increasingly at risk their hard-won 20th century gains in access to quality education, health care, and retirement security (whether paid for by a solvent public sector or a sufficiently broad-based and profitable private sector).

In addition, the manufacturing crisis raises serious questions about the U.S. economy´s ability to maintain a high-tech, world-leading military without worrisome dependence on foreign products and technologies.  Although it is true that defense-related imports come overwhelmingly from long-time allies or traditionally friendly countries, it is just as true that they are growing rapidly at a time when major disagreements increasingly mark the relationships between the United States and these countries.

Further, the massive loss of tax revenue – both corporate and personal – directly attributable to a disappearing industrial base will undoubtedly constrain America´s ability to sustain military operations in both peacetime and wartime at levels that U.S. policymakers have come to take for granted.  Thus the country faces a future in which the ability to project power and thereby affect events and outcomes the world over will be much more limited than anytime in the last century and a quarter.

Most worrisome, the decline of American manufacturing is quickly feeding on itself and gaining unstoppable momentum. Washington´s continuing failure to secure equitable terms of trade forces more and more U.S. firms to compensate by outsourcing.  These moves create powerful pressure for growing numbers of the remaining hold-out companies to follow suit.

The migration of prime contractors overseas inexorably pulls much of their supply chains with them. The export of blue-collar production work leads to the export of white-collar manufacturing-related work, as companies seek the advantages of locating researchers and designers near the factories they service.  In fact, there is a continuous feed-back loop between R&D efforts and the factory floor, with the two functions, R&D and production, operating in tandem.  And as is well documented, R&D and other technology work often produce a clustering effect, which draws labs and similar facilities from other industries in search of new synergies. The notion that the United States will retain high-end design functions while letting production migrate overseas is wishful thinking.  Without major globalization policy changes, this vicious cycle of manufacturing flight cannot be turned into a virtuous cycle of manufacturing resurgence.

LESSONS OF THE RECENT PAST

The following action plan for saving and reviving U.S. industry incorporates recent policy lessons that Americans simply can no longer afford to ignore.

First, although America´s regulatory and tax systems have unnecessarily raised domestic business costs in many instances, the manufacturing crisis springs from far deeper roots. No regulatory, health care, or tax reform schemes that would produce acceptable economic, social, or political results can overcome the damage being done to American manufacturing by today´s globalization policy failures. Improved industrial competitiveness cannot and should not be based on gutting the basics of a just, humane, and inclusive society. Fundamentally new globalization policies are the sine qua non for saving and reviving American manufacturing.

Second, the United States will always have more control over its own actions than over the actions of other countries. Therefore, the keys to reversing American manufacturing´s decline lie neither in more market-opening trade agreements nor in efforts to micro-manage economic and social conditions overseas. Despite decades of so-called free trade agreements, too many foreign markets still remain too closed to U.S. exports. The main reason: Most of the world´s countries view trade as a zero sum game, with a piece of the American domestic market as the prize.  The handful of economies wealthy enough to consume American-made goods can erect new trade barriers faster than U.S. negotiators can even identify them. The U.S. government, moreover, has too much trouble enforcing its own laws and regulations here at home to imagine that enforcing foreign laws and regulations, even those imposed by future trade agreements, will be successful.

Instead, to achieve the necessary results, the United States must focus on managing its own behavior and controlling access to its own market, unilaterally conditioning that access ona strategic analysis of its own national needs and on acceptable practices by its trade partners. In addition, the United States must rely mainly on its own power and leverage to achieve satisfactory terms of trade.  As the record unmistakably shows, one-country-one-vote international organizations like the World Trade Organization too readily turn into mechanisms for undermining American sovereignty, diluting American power, and maintaining global economic free-riding.

Finally, Washington must recognize that simply promoting economic growth and higher incomes abroad will not alone cure U.S. manufacturing´s ills and rebalance America´s trade accounts. Most countries refuse to trust their economic fates to market forces or refuse to permit higher domestic growth to draw in proportionately higher volumes of imports. In short, too little commerce around the world is free enough to allow potential future growth to serve as a U.S. trade and manufacturing cure-all.

The following U.S. Business and Industry Council manufacturing blueprint emphasizes short-term emergency measures for reversing domestic manufacturing´s decline and laying the foundation for its revival. But it also includes longer-term proposals for ensuring that U.S. trade and globalization policies do not revert to the practices that have produced today´s crisis.

EMERGENCY MEASURES

1. The president must declare that the United States faces a manufacturing, R&D, and outsourcing emergency no less threatening to America´s long-term future than even the Great Depression. He must also make clear that the crisis stems mainly from the manipulation of world trading system by mercantilist countries and to the encouragement of offshoring by U.S. trade policy.

2. The president should create an Apollo Program-type task force in the federal government to oversee Washington´s response to the manufacturing crisis. Its mission should be to restore domestic U.S. manufacturing to global preeminence and to boost domestic manufacturing employment and wages.  The program should involve all agencies of U.S. government.

3. Federal R&D spending should be tripled and Washington should offer matching grants to industry.  Special emphasis should be placed on tasking the national labs with helping to develop commercially viable, high-tech products to be manufactured in the United States.

4. The U.S. trade deficit should be quickly and dramatically reduced by imposing a “variable trade equalization tariff” on imports from countries running a trade surplus ten percent or greater of total bilateral trade.  These tariffs should be increased each year until bilateral surpluses fall below the threshold level, at which time they would be removed. Tariffs should be imposed on U.S. trading partners as soon as surpluses reach the 10 percent threshold.

The United States should offer a partial exemption for the world´s poorest countries, but only if concrete, measurable trade breaks from the other OECD countries follow suit and only if the developing country seeking the exemption demonstrates a commitment to democracy and the economic advancement of all its people.  Exemptions are not intended to enrich corrupt, dictatorial elites.

In addition, exceptions would be made for energy imports and other commodities that are not found in the United States and for which no acceptable substitutes exist.

5. Companies manufacturing or assembling in the United States should be barred from treating service work performed overseas as a deductible business expense.  Private companies that outsource overseas the processing of sensitive records, such as medical and financial records, must ensure that their subcontractors meet U.S. privacy standards or face stiff fines.  

6.. Washington should declare a moratorium on all current and future free trade talks pending development of new national trade strategy. The United States government clearly has lost the ability to negotiate trade agreements that enrich the great majority of Americans and strengthen the domestic manufacturing base on net. U.S. leaders should not engage in trade negotiations until this ability is regained.

To develop a fundamentally new national trade strategy, the president and Congress should appoint a National Trade Strategy Commission that includes representatives of business plus civil society groups, such as labor unions and environmental groups. The business representatives on the Commission should be dominated by companies and industries that produce the great majority of their product and value in the United States. The Commission should also include representatives of the nation´s science and technology and national security communities.

7. Washington should declare a moratorium on U.S. compliance with WTO panel decisions pending dramatic reform of organization to reflect America´s position in world economy. The UN Security Council veto and the IMF/World Bank weighted voting systems are possible models of international organization structures appropriate to America´s geopolitical and economic superpower status. If appropriate reform is not completed by the end of 2005, the United States should declare its intention to withdraw from the organization as soon as legally permissible.

8. Washington should declare a moratorium on U.S. compliance with NAFTA panel decisions pending reform of NAFTA´s dispute-resolution process to reflect U.S. predominance in the North American economy. In addition, NAFTA´s rules of origin and external tariffs should be revised to offer meaningful trade preferences to goods with much higher levels of North American content.

9. The U.S. government should resolve the Foreign Sales Corporation tax dispute with the European Union and the World Trade Organization by replacing the current FSC tax incentive with a major tax break for any company, either American or foreign-owned, that performs genuine manufacturing activity in the United States.  Qualification for the tax break would require detailed certification that true manufacturing is occurring in the United States.

10. The United States should expedite procedures for anti-dumping and countervailing duty suits. Threshholds for standing, actionability, and remedies should all be eased. In addition, remedies should be extended to companies up and downstream from immediately affected industries to ensure protection for suppliers and consumers, and prevent foreign economic interests from using divide and conquer tactics against domestic industries.

11. The current steel tariffs should be expanded to cover industries using significant quantities of U.S.-made steel.  Further, the option of extending the tariffs beyond the original three-year deadline should be left open in order to determine conclusively that foreign steel subsidization and dumping have ceased.

12. A stiff tariff should be imposed on countries determined by the U.S. government to be manipulating their currencies for trade advantage. In light of the Treasury Department´s equivocation on the currency policies of Asian mercantilist nations, the definition of currency manipulation that now exists must be broadened.  A strong dollar remains in the long-term interests of the U.S. economy, but foreign governments must not be able to distort trade flows to the advantage of their companies by giving them artificial cost advantages.    

13. The defense industry must be treated by the federal government in a fundamentally different way from the commercial sector.  It exists solely to serve the national interest and national security, and must be structured and managed accordingly.  Therefore, a 65 percent U.S. content requirement should be imposed on all military procurement, rising to 80 percent in five years and 95 percent in ten years.  This requirement should immediately cover the procurement of all goods and services for domestic military facilities and operations, and to the fullest extent possible cover foreign bases as well.  Presidential waiver authority should be sharply limited, especially for countries that have records as problem traders or that demand offsets for purchases of American weapons systems.

14. Public money taken from the domestic economy by taxes or borrowing should be returned to the domestic economic economy by the procurement of American-produced goods and services.  Procuring government services domestically is also necessary to ensure the continued privacy and security of the financial and health records of all Americans.  Thus a 50 percent U.S.-content requirement should be imposed on all non-military federal procurement, rising to 80 percent in five years and 95 percent in ten years. Presidential waiver authority should be sharply limited. This requirement should immediately cover the procurement of all services for domestic facilities and programs.

15. The scheduled abolition of the Multi-Fiber Arrangement governing world trade in textile and apparel should be suspended indefinitely, pending a study of the effects of the MFA's abolition on domestic and third-world producers in these industries.

16. Stiff tariffs should be levied on countries that impose offset requirements on U.S. defense manufacturers.

17. The president should declare a moratorium on foreign acquisitions of U.S. defense-related companies pending completion of comprehensive study of the status of the roughly 1,500 such companies acquired since 1988 under the current policy framework and government screening system.

18. Strict, detailed country-of-origin labeling should be required on all food and agricultural imports.

19. Legal immigration into the United States should be limited to 500,000 annually. Enforcement measures to halt illegal immigration should be dramatically increased, including significant and sustained increases in the budgets of those federal agencies responsible for enforcing immigration laws.  

Immigration at today´s levels – both legal and illegal – can only serve to depress wages for American workers by artificially inflating the supply of labor. Moreover, the most likely victims of such massive immigration flows are the recent arrivals themselves, who are forced to compete directly for jobs with the unending flow of newcomers arriving right after them.

The H-1B visa program for technology workers should be abolished.  A new federal commission comprised both of U.S. technology worker interests and tech industry interests should conduct a study to determine labor needs in technology industries and how they should be met.

LONGER-TERM MEASURES

1. Washington must insist that any future trade agreements be strictly reciprocal and strongly enforceable by the U.S. government, unilaterally if necessary.

2. Any future U.S. trade agreements must include provisions penalizing signatories for currency manipulation.  IN fact, currency manipulation can be used to defeat or offset the effects of reducing or eliminating trade barriers.  

3. The president should launch a major diplomatic campaign to press other OECD countries to increase third world imports, enforceable unilaterally by tariffs on the products of any non-cooperating OECD countries. Under-importing of third-world products by the European Union and Japan in particular has greatly increased the pressure on the U.S. market to absorb third-world production. Greater burden sharing in this vital sphere is urgently needed.

Because the overriding interest of U.S. trade policy is to advance the economic interests of the great majority on the American people and the long-term security and prosperity of the United States, Americans should feel no special obligation to import goods or services from third-world, or indeed any other, countries.  Such imports are especially unacceptable if they sacrifice the interests of American workers and domestic companies.  But a campaign to get Europe and Japan to do more is needed for three reasons:

  1. to counter perceptions that U.S. protectionism is the greatest current barrier to third world economic development;
  2. to highlight America´s record in promoting this development; and
  3. to call attention to the poor importing records of the other main OECD countries.

4. The United States should focus any new trade agreements on high-income countries capable of serving as final consumers of U.S. exports. Washington´s recent focus on third world countries capable of serving only as re-export platforms has been a substantial contributor to today´s current trade deficits.  In particular, the United States should seek a free trade agreement with Europe that excludes agriculture.  Washington should also take stronger measures to open Japanese and Korean markets, including unilateral tariffs if necessary.

5. The president should remove responsibility for monitoring and enforcing trade agreements from the office of the U.S. Trade Representative and place it in the Department of Commerce. As the lead agency for negotiating new trade agreements, the USTR´s office has every incentive to soft-pedal the deficiencies in both the structure and functioning of these agreements. Dividing these responsibilities would eliminate a major policy-making conflict of interest.  

6. Congress should enact strict foreign lobbying reform covering all federal officials, including lifetime bans on working for foreign interests for former senior Executive and Legislative branch officials.

7. The Commerce and Defense Departments should be designated as co-chairs of the inter-agency Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which reviews all proposed foreign acquisitions of U.S. defense-related companies. Exon-Florio filings  must be made mandatory, and the threshold for investigation lowered.  With the Treasury Department chairing this panel for its decade-and-a-half of existence, national security concerns have not been adequately addressed in CFIUS´s decisions, which generally reflect only Treasury´s desire to see surplus dollars in foreign hands repatriated effortlessly.

8. The president should commission immediate reports – written by special Commercial Action Teams composed mainly of industry representatives and some government officials – on foreign subsidies existing outside the steel industry and implement tariffs to offset them. Washington should first offer to negotiate the abolition of such subsidies, but it must insist on results that are achieved quickly, as well as completely verifiable and enforceable by the U.S. government.

9. The federal government must publish more complete and timely foreign trade and investment data. This data should include detailed information on the importing, sourcing, and employment trends of all multinational companies and in fact all companies that do business in the United States.  The provision of the data to the appropriate government agencies must be made mandatory.

10. The president should launch a comprehensive review of all U.S. defense alliances to determine which remain relevant to 21st century U.S. interests.  The president should explicitly state that foreign policy and defense considerations will no longer automatically trump the economic interests of the United States and the American people.

STRONG – BUT ESSENTIAL – MEDICINE

No one should assume that implementing this manufacturing revival plan will be pain-free. All economic adjustments and transitions exact costs as well as create benefits.  Those necessary to improve the long-run fundamentals of American manufacturing and strengthen the foundations of the U.S. and world economies as a whole will be that much more difficult because of the national and global economic excesses that were fostered since the completion of the “Tokyo Round” of international trade talks, but especially during the 1990s.

Specifically, some temporary slowdown in U.S. and global growth rates seems unavoidable. And thanks to the power of recklessly expanded international trade and investment, pushed unceasingly by economic ideologues and short-sighted multinational companies, achieving this slowdown will require serious restrictions on trade and investment flows.

Yet the only alternatives proposed to date are policies that are already proven failures, or that are surrenders to wishful thinking. Moreover, these responses can only postpone the day of reckoning, not prevent it. And just as permitting a disease to fester usually ensures that the needed treatment will be that much stronger, more painful, and less certain to work, permitting the manufacturing crisis to fester and inflating the global economic bubble further will only increase, not decrease the economic dangers facing America and the world.

The implementation of restorative measurers cannot be left to the good sense of Washington policymakers and elected officials.  As a group, they have demonstrated convincingly time and again that they do not grasp the magnitude of the problems they have created and that they are bereft of comprehensive solutions.  Instead, they prefer cosmetic changes, designed to relieve political pressure and ensure reelection.

If the necessary policy reorientation is to be accomplished, the impetus must come from the remaining domestic manufacturers, their employees, their communities, and local and state governments, which are experiencing first-hand the budget crises caused in large part by globalization policies – whether the movement of plants overseas, company bankruptcies due to unfair foreign practices, high-tech and other services outsourcing, uncontrolled immigration with the resulting disproportionate consumption of social services, etc.  In short, grass roots efforts must reach critical mass to force Washington to change two generations of misguided policies.

If any political leaders or economic experts know how to solve the manufacturing and trade crises without the significant trade restrictions featured in our action plan, the U.S. Business and Industry Council would welcome their ideas with open arms. But we would also be wondering what they´ve been waiting for.  The time for comprehensive action to save American manufacturing has long since passed. Very soon there will be little left to save.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: freetrade; globalism; immigration; manufacturing; nationaldebt; nationalsecurity; sovereignty; technology; thebusheconomy; trade; tradedeficit
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120 ... 441-458 next last
To: nmh
He was NOT advocating "free trade". He was advocating revolution AGAINST capitalism.

You must mean the kind of domestic capitalism that the Bush Administration is undermining with drastic expansion of social Medicare benefits and managed, globo-corporatism.

81 posted on 01/01/2004 12:30:29 PM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 77 | View Replies]

To: meadsjn
RE: "The offshoring of our most advanced technology and manufacturing cannot honestly be compared to the decline of the buggy-whip industry. It is national suicide."

That is either not understood or it's in dispute by those who seem to admire the heroic workers of the people's democratic republic and, in fact do, disparage American workers.

Uncle Joe Stalin's heroic workers were also much admired here in the U.S. by some. But most in that generation understood that we were at war. Helping the USSR to become a true superpower beyond military was bad. What is happening today IMO is proving that generation's wisdom.

Was it hedgetrimmer (sp) who recently posted links and info on the internationalists' and their organizations' influence that's assisting in our "suicide?" There's more than one front in the war.

The chi-coms permit "capitalism" in parts of their country. That ain't capitalism. That's Lenin's New Economic Plan, chi-com version.

82 posted on 01/01/2004 12:35:50 PM PST by WilliamofCarmichael
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 71 | View Replies]

To: nmh
Oh and don't forget, the WTO authorized themselves the ability to sue first world nations (us) on behalf of the third world countries we so 'abuse' and created an international court in addition to the international criminal court to do it. They can now sue us in this court and US taxpayer dollars will pay for the litigation against us.

Since we did not vote on this, and had no say in the creation of this court, it doesn't matter to them. Nor to the "free traders" who try to focus on a small, Constitutionally supported thing like tariffs, while the big things, like the loss of sovereignty and the creation of international courts for trade related matters, gets little or no discussion.

I can't think of anything more UN-american than so-called citizen advocation the wholesale transfer of our soveriegnty to a bunch of socialists. I can't think of a person with lower moral character than one who would support the WTO knowing it is an unConstitutional body, and knowing its goal is to destroy American borders, sovereignty and culture. Not one public debate has been held on this topic with the citizens, and not one citizen has been allowed a vote on the matter.
83 posted on 01/01/2004 12:36:36 PM PST by hedgetrimmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 58 | View Replies]

To: nmh
Don't 'Stay stuck in time'. Swallow your SOMA like a good hive person and let the global elites completely control your economy. There there, you will only fall into deep poverty and your culture of self government will be destroyed. But thats ok because the global elites know much better than you about what is good for you.
84 posted on 01/01/2004 12:39:02 PM PST by hedgetrimmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 73 | View Replies]

To: Willie Green
I guess you didn't bother to read what I said about automation also being implemented offshore. Even the most sophisticated automation in the world doesn't operate totally unattended. But there's no sense trying to explain that to the intentionally ignorant.

Disregarding your malcontent statements, I do understand your reasoning for replying, for without an "anti-American system" response to your posts, it can be a personal issue which could lead to your personal frustration.

85 posted on 01/01/2004 12:41:19 PM PST by EGPWS
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 75 | View Replies]

To: Willie Green
Also, the OECD and the WTO promote an idea that the UN has been promigulating, they call it "lifelong learning". This concept is basically when there are no masters at any craft, but people who must be retrained over and over again based on the jobs the central planners think they must have. Nmh is a proponent of this idea. It is the roots of Goals 2000 and no child left behind, but that is another thread.
86 posted on 01/01/2004 12:41:33 PM PST by hedgetrimmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 79 | View Replies]

To: nmh
No one is enslaved to only ONE kind of work.

Why should we be enslaved to have to change professions because a handful of globalizes want to destroy one profession after another? First it was the manufacturing jobs, so people were told to go into technology, now the technology jobs are going, so people are told to get into the services sector. So when will it end? What profession would you pick today? Most professions require a substantial investment of time and money. Most people work and gain experience at the profession they choose. You people that spout how easy it is to change professions are not being realistic. Most people can not afford to spend their lives getting different degrees in different fields. Do you know that a substantial number of engineering students are leaving this field because they know there will be no jobs when they graduate? Are we all supposed to become doctors and lawyers in order to survive?

87 posted on 01/01/2004 12:53:56 PM PST by blueriver
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 58 | View Replies]

To: Willie Green
If you really are going to start a ping list, please put me on any ping lists you decide to have regarding trade/job issues, desalination plants or mass transit. Happy New Year!
88 posted on 01/01/2004 1:00:29 PM PST by LibertyAndJusticeForAll
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: WilliamofCarmichael
"American companies invest in China, as they do in other countries, but the size of the investments are surprisingly small.

Sleight-of-statistics, here.

Since China usually builds the buildings and purchases the initial round of machinery, American FDI will not be large, even for sizeable plants.

Be aware (if you are not already) that the Nat'l Assn of Mfgrs is bi-furcated on this issue. The Fortune100 firms which contribute most of the cash are solidly behind offshoring; all the rest of NAM's members are virtually 100% opposed.

At this time, NAM officials are speaking for the Fortune100 types, albeit they are agonizing over it.

(Learned through private conversations.)

89 posted on 01/01/2004 1:06:35 PM PST by ninenot (So many cats, so few recipes)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 69 | View Replies]

To: gooleyman
Another suggestion:

The President should state that "offshore manufacturing interests of US-based companies will NOT be protected by US civil or military authority, nor will the US allow lawsuits in its Courts over disputes in offshore countries...nor will the US enforce damage collections awarded in offshore actions on behalf of companies engaged in substantial offshore manufacturing."

In other words, you wanna go there with the jobs--you no longer get our Army to back you up, nor our Courts to try your tort problems. Stuff it.

The exceptions, of course: petroleum, critical Defense-raw materials.
90 posted on 01/01/2004 1:11:55 PM PST by ninenot (So many cats, so few recipes)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 74 | View Replies]

To: blueriver
Why should we be enslaved to have to change professions because a handful of globalizes want to destroy one profession after another?

Change ALWAYS happens! It's ALWAYS been that way! It's not about globalization . That's just your hand scapegoat that allows you to avoid personal responsibility.

First it was the manufacturing jobs, so people were told to go into technology, now the technology jobs are going, so people are told to get into the services sector. So when will it end?

It won't end! Change is here to stay!


What profession would you pick today?

I've moved on from technology. I'm doing something else that fits me. The bigger question is what should YOU do? I can't tell YOU what to do. YOU need to determine that. Meantime, I'm doing just fine $$$.

Most professions require a substantial investment of time and money.

Not true. Tell that to Col Sanders who founded KFC. Look up Harland Sanders and see what he did. You're just looking for excuses.

Most people work and gain experience at the profession they choose.

Not necessarily.

You people that spout how easy it is to change professions are not being realistic.

No, you're lazy and looking for excuse on why you shouldn't CHANGE. It is REALITY that change happens. You're trying to avoid reality.

Most people can not afford to spend their lives getting different degrees in different fields. Do you know that a substantial number of engineering students are leaving this field because they know there will be no jobs when they graduate? Are we all supposed to become doctors and lawyers in order to survive?

Use the knowledge in another profession! GEESH! You make it sound like people are educated robots. If they are that way then it's no wonder they are at a loss since they are unable to THINK. Doctors and lawyers aren't all surviving. They too are changing.

Honestly, you really need to evaluate what skills you have and give the market what it wants of THOSE skills. People are CONSTANTLY reinventing themselves. Take Madonna. She can't sing worth crap - yet she constantly reinvents herself to what her audiance wants. She's not exactly a mental giant yet she makes more money than you'll ever make.

Stop being such a loser.
91 posted on 01/01/2004 1:15:07 PM PST by nmh
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 87 | View Replies]

To: nmh
Don't you feel more comfortable bashing the Pope on the other thread?

Still don't get the idea of 'solidarity' with countrymen, eh? Well, it's ok. About 1/3 of the colonists stayed with King George, and were perfectly happy to take advantage of the victory won by Washington.

Your kind has been around a long time. Parasites last forever.
92 posted on 01/01/2004 1:15:44 PM PST by ninenot (So many cats, so few recipes)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 77 | View Replies]

To: hedgetrimmer
"Don't 'Stay stuck in time'. Swallow your SOMA like a good hive person and let the global elites completely control your economy.

Huh? What on earth are you mumbling about? No "global elite" controls me! LOL! It is you who is not only "stuck in time" but unable to think rationally.


There there, you will only fall into deep poverty and your culture of self government will be destroyed. But thats ok because the global elites know much better than you about what is good for you.

LOL! I'm not in poverty now or will I be in the future. I don't let "global elites" dictate what I do for a living. The problem is you do and lash out at others who are part of your miserable lot.
93 posted on 01/01/2004 1:18:57 PM PST by nmh
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 84 | View Replies]

To: blueriver; nmh
It occurs to me that NMH is some sort of accountant. They are the only profession I am aware of which thinks that human beings are ciphers on a spreadsheet--replaceable willy-nilly, and whose craftsmanship is utterly transferable from one business to another.

Most likely NMH would be a little uncomfortable, however, were we to suggest that the former tool-maker for Tupperware plastics has recently become the surgeon who will do NMH's brain-transplant.

See--some skills are just not so easily transferrable...especially when it comes to NMH's own personal concerns.
94 posted on 01/01/2004 1:21:34 PM PST by ninenot (So many cats, so few recipes)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 87 | View Replies]

To: hedgetrimmer
Oh and don't forget, the WTO authorized themselves the ability to sue first world nations (us) on behalf of the third world countries we so 'abuse' and created an international court in addition to the international criminal court to do it. They can now sue us in this court and US taxpayer dollars will pay for the litigation against us.

Really? And are you on something illegal? I think you've gone off the deep end on this one.

Since we did not vote on this, and had no say in the creation of this court, it doesn't matter to them. Nor to the "free traders" who try to focus on a small, Constitutionally supported thing like tariffs, while the big things, like the loss of sovereignty and the creation of international courts for trade related matters, gets little or no discussion.

The U.S. is still a sovereign country and not answering to some international court or international agreements of any kind. You do have one paranoid imagination though. Ever consider writing sci-fi?

I can't think of anything more UN-american than so-called citizen advocation the wholesale transfer of our soveriegnty to a bunch of socialists. I can't think of a person with lower moral character than one who would support the WTO knowing it is an unConstitutional body, and knowing its goal is to destroy American borders, sovereignty and culture. Not one public debate has been held on this topic with the citizens, and not one citizen has been allowed a vote on the matter.

This is so sick how does one respond? It's actually you who is advocating socialism and all the rest You accuse me of. Then again, I've been coming to the conclusion that those in your condition are not the brightest light bulbs out there ... and why you are so frustrated. You want to be enslaved to menial jobs and the same routine for the rest of your life even though it is not realistic. You are your own worst enemy along with CHANGE.
95 posted on 01/01/2004 1:24:20 PM PST by nmh
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 83 | View Replies]

To: Willie Green
You must mean the kind of domestic capitalism that the Bush Administration is undermining with drastic expansion of social Medicare benefits and managed, globo-corporatism.


Social Medicare is a separate issue. Managed global corporatism - LOL! Only in the minds of the paranoid. If you insist on high salaries for jobs accomplished for less money elsewhere, by all means remain unemployed. Others are doing something else and doing quite well, thank you.
96 posted on 01/01/2004 1:26:39 PM PST by nmh
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 81 | View Replies]

To: Willie Green
Genuine conservatives are well informed on issues of national policy and are actively engaged in promoting policy changes that benefit America First! in conformance with their conservative principles.

Conservatives are informed, no doubt about that and that is WHY they don't wallow in self pity and woe is me rants like you. They get on with it and rise to new challenges. They think beyond the box, unlike you.

"Move along" is a marxist mantra chanted by proponents of elitist, globo-governance.

Actually that is true of you. But you keep thinking you are something else - whatever makes you feel good!
97 posted on 01/01/2004 1:32:25 PM PST by nmh
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 79 | View Replies]

To: Willie Green
The American Industrial Revolution pushed
America to the top of the heap very quickly after the Civil War. What else than industry does America have that would keep it at the top? Moral superiority?
98 posted on 01/01/2004 1:35:26 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: nmh
Wrong Mr nmh. It is the govt's responsibility to stop unfair predatory trade practices which results in driving the USA business out of business. It is usually a gov't sponsored company ie Japan's MITI working with the zaibatsu and keiretsu competing with US companies. The Keiretsu are organized to compete better than the US corporations. It's like were in an ass kicking contest with us having one leg tied behind our back. It's our gov't that sets the rules under which unfair competition kicks our butt.
99 posted on 01/01/2004 1:38:12 PM PST by Russ7
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 58 | View Replies]

To: nmh; Willie Green; hedgetrimmer
NMH, I think you are WORSE than an accountant--I now think you are a PRC plant.

Splains perfectly why you hate the RC Church AND Americans who are interested in America First.

Also explains why you dont have an FR about page. FR doesn't provide PRC flags...
100 posted on 01/01/2004 1:39:16 PM PST by ninenot (So many cats, so few recipes)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 95 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120 ... 441-458 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson