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How to stop exporting jobs {Henry Lamb}
WorldNetDaily / Commentary ^
| Posted: February 14, 2004
| Henry Lamb
Posted on 02/14/2004 6:45:39 AM PST by George Frm Br00klyn Park
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The irony is that Americans have made it happen. The policy agenda driven by the DSA, the Progressive Caucus and the other Democrat and Republican proponents of "sustainable development" are responsible for the export of jobs in recent years. ==================================
All, The destruction of the economy, and the middle class, in the U.S. of A. IS the result of coordinated policies. Coordinated stupidity by these most educated people in the world??? NOT LIKELY!!! Peace and love, George.
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
I live near the EPA new palace in RTP, NC. The cost for the building is approaching $450M. 2,000 people work there. Sure there are labs, etc that skew the 'cost per employee sq.ft. equation - but you do the math.
And they're proud to claim much of the building material is recycled. There is not limit to Gov't Agency spending.
2
posted on
02/14/2004 6:50:30 AM PST
by
Swanks
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
3
posted on
02/14/2004 6:52:08 AM PST
by
The_Eaglet
(Opportunity: http://www.peroutka2004.com)
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
To stop the outflow of American jobs, all that is required is to: repeal the minimum wage law...
Too bad this one isn't seen as an option--it would give the American public high school 'graduates' a shot at getting an entry-level job on which to build a life and their 'self-esteem', after years of meaningless educational promotions within the failed FEDucation system.
4
posted on
02/14/2004 6:52:44 AM PST
by
d14truth
('Kash N' Kerry--Lobbying for the Left in the US Senate)
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
Cue the "free trade" hacks...
5
posted on
02/14/2004 6:55:37 AM PST
by
agitator
(...And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark)
To: Carry_Okie; farmfriend; harpseal; editor-surveyor; A. Pole; *"Free" Trade; *"NWO"
Since the first alternative suggested repeal of the laws that inflate the cost of production is not likely to happen, and since the second alternative is already happening, with the approval and support of much of society, those who cherish free enterprise must find a way to save it.
=============================
Guys, This is an, if not THE,
IMPERATIVE for those who would leave their children a "free" world. Peace and love, George.
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
It's really quite simple. To stop the outflow of American jobs, all that is required is to: repeal the minimum wage law, outlaw labor unions, repeal the Americans with Disabilities Act, dismantle OSHA, abolish the EPA, repeal the Endangered Species Act, abandon the Ecosystem Management Policy, repeal all articles of the Clean Water Act that affect non-navigable waters and, in general, return America to the social status of India, China and the other nations to which American jobs are flowing. You don't need to outlaw labor unions, just stop giving them super legal protections. Other than that, the proposed changes only return us back to the U.S. of 1960, not to the status of China or India or any third world country. In fact, China and India have *huge* amounts of social legislation, but are riddled with corruption.
We can and should return toward a limited government republic, and getting the Bush court appointees into the federal system is a good way to continue the Supreme Court's trend back to federalism as evidenced in the Lopez decision.
7
posted on
02/14/2004 6:58:32 AM PST
by
marktwain
To: Willie Green
WG, You should have been the frst on my "bump". Sorry. Peace and love, George.
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
Having plodded through a good portion of Agenda 21, I can safely say it's an amalgam of half-truths, soviet collectivism, doom and gloom hysteria, junk science, utopian rants and socialist propaganda. It is hostile toward free enterprise, individual rights and private property, and it elevates the welfare of earth over the rights of man. It's a mix of soviet socialism and European fascism.
The Presidents Council on Sustainable Development, organized early in the Clinton administration, is where smart growth and biodiversity conservation starts. The presidents council borrowed heavily from Agenda 21. Written by NGOs pledged to the UNs utopian vision of a sweeping world government, Agenda 21 calls for state control of individuals in every aspect of life.
9
posted on
02/14/2004 6:59:36 AM PST
by
sergeantdave
(Gen. Custer wore an Arrowsmith shirt to his last property owner convention.)
To: d14truth
"...all that is required is to: repeal the minimum wage law,..., repeal the Americans with Disabilities Act, dismantle OSHA, abolish the EPA, repeal the Endangered Species Act..." Though there is dubious constitutional federal jurisdiction for such laws (commerce clause), all of these laws violate the Bill of Rights.
Amendment V
"...nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation."
10
posted on
02/14/2004 7:26:35 AM PST
by
tahiti
To: sergeantdave
"Having plodded through a good portion of Agenda 21, I can safely say it's an amalgam of half-truths, soviet collectivism, doom and gloom hysteria, junk science, utopian rants and socialist propaganda."
Sarge, And obfuscation to the max which makes the "plodding" necessary and a REAL "turn-off" for most of US. Thanks! Peace and love, George.
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
Fiscal sustainability is the key, IMO. The GAO says we have to cut spending by half or double taxes to balance the budget by 2004.
If we didn't have the most expensive and inefficient tax and regulatory schemes on the planet, funded by spending levels that are clearly unsustainable, we'd see a lot fewer good paying jobs being taxed, regulated, and litigated out of the country or out of existence.
12
posted on
02/14/2004 7:39:22 AM PST
by
yoswif
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
The current president is the first since Ronald Reagan to show any reluctance at all to advancing the principles of sustainable development at home and around the world. Clinton was the first --- his "third way" was not about advancing the principles of sustainable development at home or around the world and he signed NAFTA.
13
posted on
02/14/2004 7:46:33 AM PST
by
FITZ
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
We have a great economy. If we stick to our knitting and remove the domestic problems, we will be better off than if we overreact. The first problem American businessman face is trial lawyers and class action law suits. The new regulation called Sarbannes Oxley needs to be scrapped. Medical malpractice awards need to be capped, and class action lawsuits need to be limited. Regulatory agencies need to be downsized.
14
posted on
02/14/2004 7:51:30 AM PST
by
reed_inthe_wind
(Vienna said the middlemen come from Ger, Nether,Belg, S Af, Jap,Dub, Mal,USA,Rus,Chin,and Pak.)
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park; Willie Green
"It's really quite simple. To stop the outflow of American jobs, all that is required is to: repeal the minimum wage law, outlaw labor unions, repeal the Americans with Disabilities Act, dismantle OSHA, abolish the EPA, repeal the Endangered Species Act, abandon the Ecosystem Management Policy, repeal all articles of the Clean Water Act that affect non-navigable waters and, in general, return America to the social status of India, China and the other nations to which American jobs are flowing."
I wonder how many of the anti-free trade knucleheads would support the author's suggestion? He's certainly right on with his points.
15
posted on
02/14/2004 8:36:14 AM PST
by
ClintonBeGone
(<a href="http://www.freerepublic.com/~clintonbegone/">Hero</font></a>)
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
Comprehensive analysis of the unique cost burden carried by U.S. Manufacturers from Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI. Now that the magnitude of these underlying costs pressures is understood, it is important that federal and state officials begin to address them with new pro-manufacturing policies, he said. Foremost among these should be tax, regulatory, health and legal reforms.
The Leonard study introduces a raw cost index for manufacturers that compares the competitiveness of U.S. producers with those in its nine largest trading partners, and compares costs before and after the cost multipliers have been weighed. This study dispels the myth that most of our industrialized partners face higher manufacturing costs than we do, Leonard said. Shifts in international trade trends have generally been masked and our report shows that American trade is increasingly with developing countries where production costs are considerably lower than in the U.S. Our corporate tax burden is heavier than in eight of our nine largest trading partners, and pollution-abatement costs are significantly higher than in most other developed countries, including the so-called green economies of Western Europe.
U.S. manufacturing has demonstrated the ability to overcome pure wage differentials with trading partners through innovation, capital investment and productivity, said James Berges, President of EMERSON. But when the additional external costs described in this paper are piled on, the task becomes unmanageable, even in the best companies.
There are many self-proclaimed friends of manufacturing expressing concern who are nowhere to be seen when these excessive non-production costs are on the table, said Jasinowski. Taken together, external non-production costs have offset a large part of the 54 percent increase in productivity achieved since 1990. It is imperative that our elected representatives at all levels take a hard look at the costs created by their actions and sometimes lack of action and the impact on our economy. We simply must forge a more pro-worker, pro-manufacturing climate if our industrial leadership is to be maintained and strengthened.
To sum this analysis up, our mfr's have become 54% more efficient/productive since 1990 but the extra $$s have gone to EXTERNAL COSTS ie: Government (taxes & regulations), Health Benies and Lawyers instead of to capital investment, with the increasing of wages and jobs....our reward is a loss of jobs and trade due to our inability to be competitive on cost/price. The blame is squarely within our Liberal Government of stupidity. Go to this site for details:
http://www.nam.org/costs.
16
posted on
02/14/2004 9:40:42 AM PST
by
iopscusa
(El Vaquero)
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
...those who cherish free enterprise must find a way to save it. So when a solution is found and published, why is it that conservatives recoil in fear about real accountability and go on wishing for the government to handle it but be nicer about it?
17
posted on
02/14/2004 10:42:54 AM PST
by
Carry_Okie
(And the Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to dress it and to keep it.)
To: ClintonBeGone
>I wonder how many of the anti-free trade knucleheads would support the author's suggestion?
Knucklehead? Its amusing when you consider just what it is that you call free trade. It is system of wage arbitrage and subsidized job offshoring enshrined by 50,000 page 'free trade treaties.' (Does real free trade take a 50,000 page document to manage it? No.)
These systems are made possible only by complex, interlocking gov't legal, labor and tax policies and capital subsidies. Since it benefits large corporations, they pay some allegedly right-wing think tank so falsely call this policy free trade. Since Rush supports it, all the dopes nod their head in agreement: "Free trade. Can't go against that. Its the fault of lazy Americans and overpaid union members."
To: iopscusa
As another freeper pointed out (wish I had a link to that post) the system of wage arbitrage and offshoring has been designed to let large companies escape the regulatory and tax burdens described here WITHOUT the need to remove those burdens since they aid the politicians' program of constituent building (vote buying).
To: George Frm Br00klyn Park
The number one thing we can do to help alleviate the problem is to repeal the Income Tax!! This is a tax on labor and productivity and directly punishes the very thing we're trying to promote. The income tax greatly inflates the cost of every product and service provided by American labor and capital and barely touches imports. Repeal the income tax, repeal the minimum wage laws, and dump the myriad of overburdening regulations punishing American business and labor.
20
posted on
02/14/2004 2:55:37 PM PST
by
Jim Robinson
(I don't belong to no organized political party. I'm a Republycan.)
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