Posted on 02/18/2004 5:12:57 AM PST by beaureguard
Jobs .. and the economy. Those seem to be the issues that are driving many, if not most, of those who are supporting the Kerry candidacy.
First of all ... I'm going to repeat this simply because it makes the whiners so unbelievably angry. Listen up. They're not your jobs! The jobs belong to the employers .. not to you! You have job skills and, presumably, a willingness to work. Your task in a free economy is to get out there and find some employer with a job who needs your skills ... and strike a deal.
If you do not have the particular set of job skills that an employer needs, of if you have priced your labor out of the marketplace, guess what? It's not the employer's fault. The fault lies with you. Either develop a new set of job skills that are actually in demand, or adjust your pricing. The employer knows what he's looking for you. If you're not it .. it's your problem, not his.
Now ... you say you're going to vote for a Democrat this year because of jobs? You mean to tell me that you're going to vote against George Bush this year because you don't have a set of job skills that are in demand in our free marketplace? Yeah .. that makes a lot of sense, doesn't it?
Tell me. Just what do you want the president to do? You information technology people out there .. just what are you demanding? Do you want companies to stop outsourcing IT jobs to India? OK ... tell me how to do that. These companies aren't shipping parts overseas and completed products back. All they do is ship information overseas by phone lines or the Internet. Then that information is modified and shipped back the same way. What do you want the government .. the president to do? Do you want some federal law that prohibits companies from transmitting information overseas by the Internet, having that information transformed or modified, and then shipped back? And tell me just how do you enforce that law? Does that law then apply to you also if you seek information from a company that is located overseas, thus depriving a domestic company of your business?
Ditto for manufacturing. I've already told you the story about the California company that makes computer mouses. (computer mice?) This company ships the components to China. The mouse is assembled in China and shipped back, then sold for around $40. Why? Because the assembly is cheaper in China than it would be in the US. So, you say you want the president to force this company to have that mouse assembled in the US? Fine .. then the price for the mouse goes up to about $70 a pop and sales drop. As the sales drop the jobs of the people in this country who manufacture the components for that mouse go away. Then the 100 marketing jobs this company supports in California also go away. You see, perhaps you can succeed in forcing this company to assemble these mouses in the US, but there just isn't any way you can force the American consumer to pay 80% more for the "made in America" version.
As Bruce Bartlett says in an article listed in my reading assignments, "No nation has ever gotten rich by forcing its citizens to pay more for domestic goods and services that could have been procured more cheaply abroad."
What we are seeing here is a demonstration of the "government owes me" mentality of far too many Americans. Every time you arrive at a speed bump in your life's journey you start screaming to the government for help. Sure, the speed bump is going to slow you down a bit ... but just keep moving forward and things inevitably pick up speed again. Americans are becoming helpless whiners. The more helpless you are, and the more you whine, the more likely it is you're going to vote for a Democrat. Democrats specialize in stroking the malcontent.
Congratulations, whiners. At a time when America if fighting World War IV, the war against Islamic terrorism ... you're going to vote for a candidate who wants to treat terrorism as a freaking law enforcement problem because you've made some pitiful jobs choices. Pitiful.
Actually, jobs outsourced to Mexico through NAFTA are now being sent to China - which underbids the Mexicans in the cheap labor department.
The best labor rate for corporations: slave labor.
That's the old paradigm. The new paradigm is "I don't care about your job, as long as you vote for my candidate".
Nobody died in France to protect the loans of the bankers.
We will all starve.
I have never heard that phrase used as a rationale for protectionism.
Now you have. It used to mean "People died so you could be free."
Now it means something like "If you want to make a profit you must employ me at a living wage."
Doesn't quite mist my eye like the old one, but to each his own.
Good luck - because you simply cannot compete with Chinese prison and slave labor.
It's amazing how many of these "free trade" arguments sound like the arguments made by slaveowners prior to the Civil War. Both the antebellum South, and multinational corporations today, owe their profits to *someone else being enslaved.*
Free market disposable labor is cheaper. Slaves you need to feed well, house, make sure that they get enough rest, and care for them when they get sick. With commodity labor, burned out or disabled workers can be tossed out and replaced like a tire in a car.
Check out Hot Topic: last time I was in their store I checked labels, and a good 80-90% of the products were "made in USA." In my city there is also a good resale market for Hot Topic / Torrid (sister company for plus sizes) clothes. The resale shops won't touch the made-in-China crap but will buy and resell these clothes.
It's really both, since neither of us is getting what we want. And if I *do* possess the skills that the employer needs, but the employer's policies obstruct 'striking a deal', then it's their problem. Many companies (large organizations in general, actually) have come to resemble corrupt, bureaucratic socialist governments more than capitalistic enterprises, with an apparent desire to protect their status quo instead of maximizing profits.
What we are seeing here is a demonstration of the "government owes me" mentality of far too many Americans... The more helpless you are, and the more you whine, the more likely it is you're going to vote for a Democrat. Democrats specialize in stroking the malcontent.
Government *does* owe me. For one thing, I pay taxes & am owed on account of that, but let's set that aside for the moment. Government owes me because it kidnapped me as a child via the mechanism of compulsory education and taught me that certain things were true, when they weren't. This "education" included what was ostensibly job training. Since I now know that the government fraudulently misrepresented what it was offering & wasted years of my life in the process, you'd better BET they owe me.
As for voting for Democrats, that would simply be stupid and/or evil. Doesn't change the fact that our government defrauded me when I was too young to even realize it.
The employer lost - and, in many cases, exchanged for subsidies - the autonomy that is claimed in this article.
The powers that be ignore motivated voters at their peril.
That I created? I'm not the corporation that decides to abandon America for the cheap labor market. When they decide to abandon the U.S. that's the chance they take. It's called cost benefit analysis. They stand the risk of being nationalized.
I'll agree with you on your other matters of tort reform, regulation and taxation though.
But as for your scenario of people eating dog food, I see the same kind of a situation if people are not able to find a job in our own country that would pay them at least a livable wage. And such would be the case if our labor pool is drawn from all of the Americas as is the plan under CAFTA and FTAA. Match any willing employer with and willing worker! Those were the words and as we have been told before, our president says what he means and means what he says.
So address that please.
BTW! I voted for Bush!
I don't deal in conspiracy theories. It was taught in a "Recent Britain" History class. Britain, from 1871-1918.
It was in fact the real reason for the U.S. entering the war. And you certainly can't deny that many died in France.
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