So why vote for either party? A What legislation you specifically have in mind?Both parties have enacted legislation that caused and is still causing demonstrable financial harm to American citizens. — creativesoul
He has a history of other quite dubious things, but who cares about the "character issue" anymore? We have had plenty of his 'character' as President. I'd concentrate on his presidency.Trump's claims about supporting American workers are bullshit, pure and unadulterated. He has a history of breaching contracts and using undocumented workers in lieu of American workers. — creativesoul
...who cares about the "character issue" anymore? — ssu
Both parties have enacted legislation that caused and is still causing demonstrable financial harm to American citizens.
— creativesoul
So why vote for either party? — ssu
What would you do if YOU were President?Neither party stands with American manufacturing... both parties have spoken as if they do. — creativesoul
Neither party stands with American manufacturing... both parties have spoken as if they do.
— creativesoul
What would you do if YOU were President? — Relativist
Personally, I don"t think it's possible to rescue manufacturing jobs (if that's what you're after). — Relativist
I favor providing opportunities to train for better alternative jobs - i.e. help people, not market segments.
Suppose a US manufacturer wants to source parts from a Vietnamese company. Will this only be allowed if that Vietnamese company pays their worker at a scale similar to the US, they work a 40 hour work week, with annual paid vacation a year, a medical plan etc?It would require a carefully staked out and principled course of action. It requires a "take it or leave it" ultimatum placed upon anyone and everyone who wants to benefit from following American law and being an active part of American marketplace. If you sell goods in America or to Americans, then the rules governing American business practices, including workers' rights, must be adhered to in every aspect of your business practice. — creativesoul
What makes you think that? Here's why I say this: Manufacturing jobs in the US have been on the decline for decades, and not solely because of competition for cheap foreign labor - automation was a big driver. But those lost jobs have not resulted in unemployment - they've resulted in people having different jobs. What's wrong with that? What's so special about manufacturing jobs that we must save them? As I said, I think it makes more sense to focus on jobs in general, not some particular types of jobs, like manufacturing. That sounds a bit like Trump promising to save jobs in the coal business, despite the fact that demand for coal is declining or flat, and automation is eliminating jobs. How is this different from saving the jobs of Blockbuster video clerks who rented VCR tapes?I favor providing opportunities to train for better alternative jobs - i.e. help people, not market segments.
Strawman. Red herring. Non-sequitur. — creativesoul
What legislation is that? Do you mean the legislation regarding job safety, minimum wage, and other things that benefit them - but drive up the cost of labor in the US? Or do you mean the absence of the sort of legislation that you discussed that requires foreign companies to follow our standards?The manufacturing sector is comprised of the people who've suffered demonstrable harm as a result of American legislation. There are other segments of people who've been harmed by different sorts of legislation. — creativesoul
It would require a carefully staked out and principled course of action. It requires a "take it or leave it" ultimatum placed upon anyone and everyone who wants to benefit from following American law and being an active part of American marketplace. If you sell goods in America or to Americans, then the rules governing American business practices, including workers' rights, must be adhered to in every aspect of your business practice.
— creativesoul
Suppose a US manufacturer wants to source parts from a Vietnamese company. Will this only be allowed if that Vietnamese company pays their worker at a scale similar to the US, they work a 40 hour work week, bet at least 2 weeks vacation a year, a medical plan etc? — Relativist
What makes you think that? Here's why I say this: Manufacturing jobs in the US have been on the decline for decades, but those lost jobs have not resulted in unemployment - they've resulted in people having different jobs. What's wrong with that? — Relativist
So are you saying that it's still OK to take advantage of cheap labor in foreign countries? — Relativist
This sounds a bit like Trump promising to save jobs in the coal business, which was compared to saving jobs at Blockbuster Video renting VCR tapes. — Relativist
Strawman. Red herring. Non-sequitur.
— creativesoul
What makes you think that? — Relativist
There are two very basic falsehoods and obvious myths that persist in US politics and with a large section of American voters.That sentiment is one consequence of the problems I'm speaking about. When neither candidate from either party is willing to tackle the underlying corruption, and all that that entails - head on - and all effected/affected Americans see the quality of life erode right before their eyes as a result... You get apathetic voters. — creativesoul
What specifically did elected officials do, or not do, to cause or contribute to this problem?I'm not just advocating for deliberate investment and cultivation of manufacturing jobs. It just so happens that those are the ones being spoken of at this time, because those are the ones lost by virtue of American elected officials not keeping their word to act on behalf of what's in the best interest of the overwhelming majority of Americans while simultaneously making America look like it's not willing to follow it's own rules. — creativesoul
I don't understand why you're attacking me. You made a vague, general claim, and I've asked you for specifics while giving you my general thoughts. If you have some facts, present them and skip the insults.Listen, I suspected earlier on in this conversation that you were going to attempt to talk in meaningless rhetorical political gibber-jargon... — creativesoul
This is what's vague. What laws are you referring to?American law resulted in losing American manufacturing, over the decades. — creativesoul
Just describe the sort of laws that you believe caused this. I touched on a few things to see if that's what you meant, and you attacked me.What do you want?
Are you wanting me to specify exactly which pieces of legislation throughout the last forty to fifty years led up to and/or paved the way for the wealth disparity we currently see, including those laws and/or policies that directly undercut American workers and manufacturing? — creativesoul
I agree there are a variety of problems with the political landscape, and it would be great to address these. My questions pertained to your comment about maufacturing jobs, which you addressed here;There are several different aspects of the current political landscape that need attention; some involving laws effecting/affecting different sectors; some involving the lack thereof; some involving basic housing and education and how those are affected/effected by political parties; some involving how political parties raise money; some involving how candidates are advocated for; some involving how candidates campaigns are funded; some involving income tax regulation; some involving who actually writes the legislation; etc. — creativesoul
I agree that trade deals have hurt US manufacturing, but they have helped other job sectors - and my impression (based on economic analyses I've read) is that they've been a net positive. But even without these deals, manufacturing jobs would have declined due to automation and imports, it just would have been quite as steep a decline.What are you asking me about?
Trade deals? The laws that incentivized and rewarded American companies to move production operations elsewhere? — creativesoul
...trade deals have hurt US manufacturing, but they have helped other job sectors - and my impression (based on economic analyses I've read) is that they've been a net positive. — Relativist
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