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LET'S TALK ABOUT "YOUR" JOBS
Nealz Nuze ^
| Wednesday, February 18, 2004
| Neal Boortz
Posted on 02/18/2004 5:12:57 AM PST by beaureguard
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To: MrB
FINE, let the President and the Republican party run on a platform of "Billions for CEO's, Crumbs and Economic Ruin for the Rest" and see how far they get.
The Rats have already picked up this ball and are running with it while Mr Bush has said through his economic adviser that getting rid of high-paying American jobs is a good thing. Mr Bush has also said through his illegal Mexican amnesty bill that getting rid of low-paying American jobs is a good thing as well!
That about covers it all, eh?
We will see how well this plays out in the fall.
To: hchutch
Then move to Mexico or India if your so lacking in concern for your nation that you would engage in piracy.
To: MEG33
If the shoe fits, wear it.
To: applemac_g4
That sentence distills the present problem down to its essence: American workers are unwilling to adjust the price of their labor to third world levels and suffer the hit in standard of living that this would bring about. This, however, is what Bush and the corporations would like to see happen.
You come close to hitting the nail on the head here. If we weren't saddled with the responsibility to support a host of handouts across the board (personal and corporate welfare, unfunded mandates, etc...), we'd be able to take the paycheck hit and continue to enjoy the standard of living while being more competitive with the low cost countries.
Since we have this enormous handout system the only way to keep it running is to inflate the currency and deficit spend. The side effect of this is to enslave us to the resultant artificially inflated asset values (like real estate). It won't get better until it shakes out and the Feds do a LOT of cutting on the handout side and I'm not going to hold my breath for that...
144
posted on
02/18/2004 6:44:05 AM PST
by
Axenolith
(Politicians lie. If they told the truth, the voters would vote for their lying opponents.)
To: Walkin Man
These free traitor fools just don't get it.
To: beaureguard
bump!
146
posted on
02/18/2004 6:45:35 AM PST
by
OXENinFLA
(LET'S SEE KERRY'S PURPLE HEART WOUNDS!!!)
To: beaureguard
Personally I would rather see Taxes on businesses cut Drastically (80 to 90 percent)
I would also like to see Government get the hell out of the lives of businesses so that they can do what they need to do to make money instead of wasting time and money on bullshit regulations. Also get rid of that idiotic Minimum Wage law.
Then maybe our jobs would stay here instead of being shipped overseas.
147
posted on
02/18/2004 6:45:37 AM PST
by
Leatherneck_MT
(Good night Chesty, wherever you may be.)
To: beaureguard
Jobs flourish here because we're prising open markets.
To: Republican Red
I think he normally does vote Libertarin, but he seems to feel very strongly about WWIV( War on Terrorist)
149
posted on
02/18/2004 6:46:49 AM PST
by
SeeRushToldU_So
(I was winning the pool on the Super Bowl for 3.5 minutes.)
To: kaylar
We have not yet begun tosee what a disasterous mistake outsourcing is. That she-dog who threatened to put confidential patient information online unless she was given a $10,000 bribe?
I've seen the same thing threatened here in the US. If those countries want our business they must and have put in the laws to protect confidentiality. If they haven't then they are stupid and will lose out on all the business.
To: kaylar
The munitions plant in my area is working 24/7 and has since 9/11.
Several small manufacturers (in the $1M-$3M gross range)near me supply items to the military.
Back in the 90s, an LEO/EMT friend of my brother started a manufacturing business that had, as its first client, the US military. Not sure if they are still doing that or not, but to me, the point is that they tried. Their financing came from several private individuals who saw it as a good investment,
I even know a small business in the NYC/NJ area that does marketing and promotion that won an Army contract to set up and run various recruiting programs.
I thought I read that the military actually will not outsource sensitive defense contracts? Maybe I missed that they actually do?
To: Walkin Man
That statement about outsourcing was taken out of context..I saw the whole quote and only a democrat would say what you said..
The Republicans are not running on the platform you describe and you know it.You are a drama queen after all..and a democrat one at that.
152
posted on
02/18/2004 6:50:23 AM PST
by
MEG33
(John Kerry's been AWOL for two decades on issues of National Security!)
To: Walkin Man
The alternative is to further abandon the principles of the founders embodied in the Constitution - as GW has been doing with his domestic social(ist) programs.
153
posted on
02/18/2004 6:51:08 AM PST
by
MrB
To: StatesEnemy
What law of economics is that?! Is that law only in operation on the North American continent? You're talking zero sum here, if the Americans were paid this hypothetical equilibrium wage you'd have to put a 50+% tariff on things like Korean cars and they'd be back to square one forking out $25,000 for a cracker box car (among other things) on their $60,000 "equilibrium wage".
Of course, prices on goods would rise commensurately here, but we could fix that with "wage and price controls" right?
154
posted on
02/18/2004 6:51:56 AM PST
by
Axenolith
(Politicians lie. If they told the truth, the voters would vote for their lying opponents.)
Do government jobs belong to taxpayers?
155
posted on
02/18/2004 6:52:22 AM PST
by
Consort
To: kaylar
American IT workers may have been the best...But they are not willing to live on $10,000-20,000 a year. And even if they were willing to do so, how can they,in virtually any part of the USA? People working or training for the health care industry are about to get the IT treatment. Just look at radiologists and transcriptionists. Nursing is being teed-up first for "guest workers" to come in at half the pay.
156
posted on
02/18/2004 6:52:24 AM PST
by
Orangedog
(An optimist is someone who tells you to 'cheer up' when things are going his way)
To: Axenolith
The answer is to become a lawyer like Senator Edwards. Then you can trump up some charges for a whiner to make against an employer, win in the corrupt court system, or get a settlement, rip off 33%, buy a new house and car, live well and say what you are doing is to help the wronged.This type job can't be exported.
To: MissAmericanPie
Why don't YOU move to a place where shakedowns and extortion are legal? Becuase as far as I am concerned, that is what a LOT of these folks complaining about outsourcing are doing.
I'm sorry if I refuse to be extorted by ANYONE, I don't give a damn if it's Lou Dobbs or Jesse Jackson doing it. If refusing to give in to a shakedown is piracy, then so be it.
158
posted on
02/18/2004 6:53:52 AM PST
by
hchutch
("I never get involved with my own life. It's too much trouble." - Michael Garibaldi)
I'd just like to comment that it's good to see some 'Rats on Freerepublic.
I left for a while because there were no voices of dissent to argue with - the real fun of boards like this.
Welcome folks like Walkin Man...
159
posted on
02/18/2004 6:54:46 AM PST
by
MrB
To: Leatherneck_MT
I agree. I'm suprised it took this long for someone to state just that point. However, while you are handing out carrots to business, you need to swing the stick a bit harder as well. There ARE some bad eggs out there (Enron, Global Crossing) that need to be gotten rid of. Make it so that malfeasance by management, like WalMart being fined for hiring illegals, has a PERSONAL cost instead of an easily paid corporate write-off. Hold CEO's directly accountable for damages done via fraud or shady business practices.
Between the deregulation of all the Bravo Sierra tax crap, the removal of burdensome regulations, and the heavier hand of laws writen to punish REAL damamge, we could really get this economy cooking again before we lose our top spot as the Big Dog in the global economy.
160
posted on
02/18/2004 6:55:02 AM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(For an Evil Super Genius, you aren't too bright are you?)
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