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Losing America's Livelihood
The New American ^ | 1/26/04 | William Jasper

Posted on 02/04/2004 9:36:33 AM PST by ninenot

Up to 14 million jobs … are at risk of being shipped overseas, two UC Berkeley economists said Wednesday in a research report.

Contra Costa Times October 30, 2003

“We’re trying to move everything we can offshore,” HP [Hewlett-Packard] Services chief Ann Livermore told Wall Street analysts at a meeting Wednesday.

Forbes, December 5, 2002

But as the US economy has slowly shifted toward service jobs, factory jobs have been steadily lost — in fact, in just the past 39 months, some 2.8 million have vanished.

Christian Science Monitor December 11, 2003

Will America be a Third World country in 20 years?

— Paul Craig Roberts, columnist-economist, January 21, 2003


John Williams has been shrimping since 1960. Together with his wife, Kathleen, he operates three shrimp boats out of Tarpon Springs, Florida, north of Tampa Bay. He has weathered recessions, squalls and hurricanes. But he is now facing a tidal wave that has already buried thousands of his fellow shrimp fishermen. It is a tidal wave of foreign shrimp — nearly one billion pounds of it — crashing onto the U.S. market from Red China, Vietnam, Thailand, India and more than a dozen other countries.
Last year Williams’ outfit, Gulf Partners, Ltd., hauled in about one million pounds of shrimp. “We’ve produced about the same amount of product for the past several years,” he told The New American, “but the price we get has dropped dramatically. Our gross revenue has dropped more than 50 percent. But our operational costs haven’t gone down; in fact, they’ve gone up.” According to Williams, who is secretary-treasurer of the Southern Shrimp Alliance, an eight-state coalition of shrimpers, the value of U.S.-harvested shrimp was cut in half, from $1.25 billion in 2000 to $560 million in 2002. Employment at southern shrimp plants dropped 40 percent.
The plight of America’s shrimping industry is symptomatic of the dire consequences potentially awaiting every U.S. industry. It also starkly illustrates how suddenly an entire sector of our economy can be targeted and hollowed out, if not completely destroyed.
For generations, shrimping has provided a good livelihood for several hundred thousand Americans in Gulf Coast communities from Texas to Florida. Then, virtually overnight, foreign producers almost completely took over the U.S. market and now provide 88 percent of the shrimp consumed in the U.S. And it isn’t because the foreign shrimp industry is more efficient or produces a better quality product. The real tsunami hit U.S. shrimpers in 2002, when the European Union, Japan and Canada banned shrimp from China, Thailand and Vietnam because of detected residues of chloramphenicol, a potent, broad-spectrum antibiotic suspected of causing aplastic anemia and other blood conditions. China, Thailand and Vietnam unloaded their shrimp cargoes on the U.S. market instead, even though federal regulations prohibit use of chloramphenicol in food-producing animals and animal feed products.
Shrimp fishermen like John Williams are fuming. “Another year like this and there won’t be any domestic shrimp industry left to speak of,” Williams told The New American, noting that he recently saw a repossessed $800,000 shrimp boat sell for $100,000 at a bank auction. “This is just plain wrong when a whole industry of hardworking, taxpaying American citizens can be put out of business like this by foreign competitors subsidized by their governments.”
What Williams finds even more galling is that our government is subsidizing his foreign competitors, too! Yes, the same federal policymakers who have slapped domestic shrimp producers with onerous regulations, are not only helping his foreign shrimpers with incredible trade privileges, but actually aiding them with loans, grants and loan guarantees as well. Through assistance provided by the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the Export-Import Bank and other foreign aid programs, “we’re not only giving them loans and subsidies, but advanced technology too,” Williams notes with exasperation.
In 2002 and 2003, Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) introduced the Shrimp Importation Financing Fairness Act, which aimed to stop some of these policies that are aiding the destruction of our domestic shrimping industry. The Paul bill would declare a moratorium on federal regulations that are making U.S. shrimping non-competitive and end funding of federal programs and international institutions that provide financial aid to countries that are dumping their subsidized shrimp on our market.
Rep. Paul’s legislation names seven countries — Thailand, Vietnam, India, China, Ecuador, Indonesia, and Brazil — as the main dumping culprits. But paragraphs 8 and 9 of Section 2 are the real shockers in the bill. Most Americans would be stunned to learn what our political leaders are doing with our tax dollars. Those two paragraphs read:
(8) Since 1999 our Government has provided more than $1,800,000,000 in financing and insurance for these foreign countries through the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, and our Government’s current exposure relative to these countries through our Export-Import Bank totals some $14,800,000,000, bringing the total subsidy of these countries by the United States to over $16,500,000,000.
(9) Many of these countries are not market-oriented, and hence their participation in United States-supported international finance regimes amounts to a direct subsidy by American taxpayers in the shrimping sector of their international competitors.

That’s $16.5 billion. With help like that, is it any wonder that these countries are able to produce the glut of shrimp that is destroying our shrimping industry?

Different Industries, Same Story


What do Gulf Coast shrimp boat owners like John Williams have in common with tool and die makers in the Great Lakes region, sawmill owners in the Pacific Northwest, Midwest farmers, Texas ranchers, New England manufacturers, or California software engineers and computer consultants? The same thing that their business counterparts throughout the U.S. in virtually every industry share: the threat of extinction due to perverse government policies that penalize American producers and reward their foreign competitors. They are caught in a vise of regulatory policies that have driven their operating costs far above those of their foreign competitors, and U.S. trade policies that encourage foreign producers to dump their products on the American market. On top of that, the U.S. government pours billions of U.S. tax dollars into subsidies for their foreign competitors!
America’s tool and die industry is in danger of going the way of our shrimping industry. Why should that concern the vast majority of Americans who are not directly involved in this industry? Because it is essential to all manufacturing. The industrial machinery that is used to manufacture almost everything — from cell phones, toothbrushes and Barbie dolls to computer chips, medical diagnostic equipment and fighter jet engines — begins with tool and die makers. We cannot expect to sustain a modern society, let alone defend ourselves and maintain our prosperity and technological leadership, without them. But our tool and die industry is rapidly disappearing. In Michigan, about 34,000 tooling jobs have vanished in the last five years, according to state labor data. The National Tooling & Machining Association (NTMA) reports that about 30 percent of the country’s toolmakers have gone out of business since 2000 and many more are expected to follow.
“Guys that were earning $20 an hour two years ago making very high-precision tools are now stocking shelves at Wal-Mart,” said NTMA President Matt Coffey in a recent Detroit Free Press article on the plight of the tooling industry. Coffey estimates that there are fewer than 10,000 U.S. tooling companies today, down from roughly 14,000 a few years ago. Which could mean that 140,000 tooling jobs have disappeared nationally since 2000. This trend will prove disastrous for our country, if allowed to continue.
“One of the advantages our manufacturers always have had is that the toolmakers were here and were good,” Peter Morici, former chief economist for the U.S. International Trade Commission, told the Free Press. “It undermines the whole manufacturing base in the long term if they go away,” he noted. “When all these little toolmakers go away, they don’t re-open. Their sons do something else and that skill is lost. The decline of toolmaking is like the growth of a desert. Once it starts, it’s tough to stop from spreading.”
Mr. Morici’s comments echo the alarm expressed by Bob Davis, general manager of Modern Die Systems Inc. of Elwood, Indiana, in an interview with The New American last year (“Your Job May Be Next!” March 10, 2003). “Our government has set it up so that it is unprofitable to manufacture here in the U.S.,” he told this writer. Mr. Davis noted the tremendous disincentives to production posed by taxes, regulations, employee medical insurance, and labor union obstruction — the combined effects of which are driving many businesses into the ground, or out of the country. We are killing the goose that laid the golden egg. “Our country’s entire production capability will be stripped bare if this continues,” Davis said. “And with it will go all of the jobs and small and medium-sized independent businesses that are the bedrock of the American middle class.”

Shooting Ourselves in the Foot


America’s small- and medium-sized businesses traditionally have been a vital source of jobs, as well as a wellspring of creativity, invention and innovation that has propelled us to global economic and technological dominance. Limited government interference in the marketplace combined with a general acceptance of Christian morality was the key that unleashed the American entrepreneurial spirit and gave rise to our prosperity and the development of a large middle class. But the free enterprise system that made our economic miracle possible is being suffocated in a socialist swamp of regulatory red tape. U.S. regulatory costs — especially from regulations allegedly aimed at environmental and safety risks — are particularly hazardous to small and medium businesses.
The true extent of that hazard is amply exposed in an important study released in December 2003 by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM). The comprehensive NAM study significantly noted that “compliance costs for regulations can be regarded as the ‘silent killer’ of manufacturing competitiveness.” The report revealed that the regulatory, tax and mandate burden is adding at least a staggering 22.4 percent (nearly $5 per hour worked) to the cost of doing business in the U.S. relative to our major foreign competitors. To appreciate the magnitude of this burden, consider that these external costs imposed by government are more than twice the average direct labor costs of U.S. manufacturers, which are 11 percent.
NAM President Jerry Jasinowski noted that the NAM study documents that “we are essentially shooting ourselves in the foot competitively by making it too expensive to make products in America.” What’s more, the regulatory agencies have negated many of the impressive gains in production efficiency of the past decade. “Taken together,” notes Jasinowski, “external non-production costs have offset a large part of the 54 percent increase in productivity achieved since 1990.”
“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, a St. Louis-based manufacturer of industrial equipment. “But when the additional external costs described in this [NAM] paper are piled on, the task becomes unmanageable, even in the best companies.”
In fact, the piling on can be worse than unmanageable; it is often fatal. Thousands of small and medium businesses already have been slain by this silent killer and many more will succumb to its deadly effects. (See sidebar.)

Driving Jobs Offshore


Even large corporations cannot absorb the crushing U.S. regulatory burden for long without losing competitiveness vis-à-vis foreign producers. However, large corporations have options not readily available to many smaller businesses: They can more easily move their manufacturing and processing operations overseas, outsource many of their service sectors to cheaper foreign providers, and import cheaper foreign employees under various visa programs. And that is precisely what they are doing, in huge quantum jumps that defy any historic comparison.
America is in the midst of an enormous job outsourcing boom that gives every indication of accelerating. In addition to the continued massive hemorrhaging of America’s manufacturing and blue-collar jobs that began two decades ago, we now have a huge and growing crisis involving the flight of millions of hi-tech and white-collar jobs. If appropriate action is not taken to address the factors propelling this massive exodus, it is not an exaggeration to say that America is headed toward has-been status. A much-quoted study by Forrester Research Inc. last year predicted that at least 3.3 million white-collar jobs and $136 billion in wages will shift from the U.S. to low-cost countries by 2015.
An October 2003 report by researchers from the University of California-Berkeley’s Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics suggests that the Forrester predictions may be extremely conservative. According to the Berkeley researchers, as many as 14 million service jobs are at risk of outsourcing.
The authors of the Berkeley report, Ashok Deo Bardhan and Cynthia A. Kroll, note that “the recent boom in outsourcing is causing growing apprehension in the U.S. that this may well be the largest out-migration of non-manufacturing jobs in the history of the U.S. economy.” (Emphasis added.)
Many of these jobs are going to India. By tabulating reports in Indian newspapers and business journals for the month of July 2003 alone, Bardhan and Kroll reported that they found “25,000 to 30,000 new outsourcing related jobs announced by U.S. firms. In the same month, there were 2,087 mass layoff actions carried out by U.S. employers resulting in a loss of 226,435 jobs.”
“The jobs being created in India and elsewhere are in a wide range of service sectors,” say Bardhan and Kroll, “such as geographic information systems services for insurance companies, stock market research for financial firms, medical transcription services, legal online database research, and data analysis for consulting firms, in addition to customer service call centers, payroll and other back-office related activities.”
In addition to the millions of U.S. jobs that soon could be leaving for India, China, Russia and other offshore destinations, there is the added threat to American workers from imported labor. Hundreds of thousands of American information technology (IT) workers have lost their jobs in the past several years to foreign replacements through the L-1 and H-1B visa programs. American software engineers, computer designers, technicians, electrical engineers and other hi-tech employees are being replaced by workers from India, Pakistan, the Middle East and China.
No other country in the world has adopted such reckless and suicidal immigration policies. Incredibly, the Bush administration is advocating an amnesty for millions of illegal aliens that dwarfs the amnesty proposals of Bill Clinton. Moreover, President George Bush and many members of Congress enthusiastically favor more outsourcing, more L-1 and H1-B visas, and more immigration overall. At a December 15, 2003 press conference, President Bush stated: “I have constantly said that we need to have an immigration policy that helps match any willing employer with any willing employee.” (Emphasis added.) There is virtually an unlimited supply of willing employees worldwide who would be more than happy to immigrate to the U.S., but how is that going to help put Americans back to work?
It won’t, says Jan Frelick, who has experienced the outsourcing and foreign “temps” up close and personal. Mrs. Frelick worked for computer giant Hewlett-Packard in the San Francisco Bay area but transferred to HP’s facility in the Sacramento area in 1990. As computer security administrator for her division and a member of the division’s business control team, she had a ringside seat from which she watched HP outsource droves of jobs. “Then, on August 24, 2001,” Frelick told The New American, “it happened to me. I wasn’t ‘downsized’ — the term they deceptively use — I was replaced. So were almost all other employees in many units. The IT Support Desk, for instance, which previously was staffed completely by Americans, is now staffed by people from India.”

False Solutions, Toxic Antidotes


The cheery advocates of globalization blithely dismiss concerns about massive job losses, the wholesale gutting of our economy and the flight of entire industries from our shores. Their mantra-like response is that the huge exodus of jobs, manufacturing, and technology is actually a good thing representing the elimination of obsolete remnants of the “old economy,” to make way for the higher value, cutting-edge technologies and jobs of the new global economy. These glib advocates are dealing in voodoo economics and globaloney social science. The jobs and technology we are outsourcing do not have to do with genuinely obsolete technology like buggy whips and whale oil lamps, as the globalists assert. They have to do with the production of real wealth, real products and real services that are essential to sustaining a modern, prosperous society.
Where are the wonderful new jobs the globalists keep promising? Hundreds of thousands of skilled and experienced white collar and blue collar workers — engineers, computer programmers, toolmakers, accountants and technicians — are unemployed, or have been reduced to taking near-minimum-wage jobs. Political forces, not market forces, are driving these devastating changes. As we have noted above, it is perverse government policies that are responsible for making American companies uncompetitive, subsidizing our foreign competition, outsourcing jobs and flooding our job market with immigrants and “temporary” foreign workers. America has gone through economic downturns before and seen periods of high unemployment. But the economy has always rebounded and the jobs have returned as businesses have revved up production. However, that is not going to happen with the thousands of businesses and the millions of jobs we have been losing.
The Bush administration and its allies in Congress — Republican and Democrat — have given no indication of reversing our disastrous course. Indeed they are proposing supposed solutions that would prove to be even more calamitous. They are saddling U.S. businesses with even more oppressive mandates and regulatory overkill, while pushing for more job outsourcing, more temporary worker visas, far greater immigration quotas, an amnesty for illegal aliens and the removal of virtually all tariffs.
Moreover, the president has staked out 2004 to push for completion of the so-called Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) agreement, a plan to merge the countries of the Western Hemisphere into a European Union-style common market. However, like the original European Common Market, the FTAA is much more than a trade pact. It has been designed to evolve into a supranational regional government, but in a much shorter time span than it took the Europeans to arrive at that stage. Like the EU, the FTAA’s central executive authority would be strongly socialistic and would gradually claim the power to overrule the national laws and constitutions of its member states. The FTAA Declarations, Plans of Action and Charter drafts call for regional “integration,” in accordance with the charters of the UN and the World Trade Organization. The FTAA would establish a bureaucracy of agencies to monitor, and eventually dictate, regional health, education, labor, environment, foreign aid, immigration and security policies. Like the EU, the FTAA is set up to acquire, gradually, full legislative, executive and judicial powers. As such, it is plainly a power grab disguised in the garb of a trade agreement.
The most frightening aspect of the proposed FTAA is the fact that its realization would spell the end to our national sovereignty and sweep aside constitutional impediments to the concentration of tyrannical power. But the more immediately felt effects would include a rapid dissolving of our borders and an enormous deluge of immigrants (both legal and illegal) from Latin America and the Caribbean. At the same time, billions of dollars of agricultural products, textiles, manufactured goods and other products will flood our markets devastating every industry sector in the same way that our domestic shrimp industry has been wrecked.
These so-called solutions are manifestly suicidal. If America is to be spared sinking into Third World status, we must completely reverse course. That means awakening and energizing a minority of the American public sufficient to compel Congress to: abolish the socialist regulatory monster that is destroying our country’s competitiveness; take back control of our borders and enforce sensible, reduced immigration; end all U.S. taxpayer subsidies to foreign competitors; and defeat the FTAA. It’s really very simple. Not easy, but simple.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: Florida; US: Mississippi; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: economy; ftaa; gwbush; jbs; jobloss; johnbirchsociety; manufacturing; morebsfromjbs; outsourcing; ronpaul; thenewamerican; treaty
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To: DannyTN
Actually we need to understand that this will accelerate. economics and freedom.
41 posted on 02/04/2004 12:06:56 PM PST by Protagoras (When they asked me what I thought of freedom in America,,, I said I thought it would be a good idea.)
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To: jpsb
What I did was go to amazon.com and search on robotics. There is a lot of stuff, I picked out a couple of the cheaper books. Actually, I'm not entirely new to this field, did some work years ago in LISP and Prolog. Check out Lego, they have a starter robotics kit with most of the types of devices in the box that one should learn how to program. Legos in space!
42 posted on 02/04/2004 12:07:22 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: Arthalion
I see the same thing. If we continue to see life as something that appears on our TV screens and in our malls, it is just a matter of time.
43 posted on 02/04/2004 12:11:00 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
In a free market, the job goes to the lowest bidder. Unless you're a union thug.

Or an American engineer, generally not a member of a union.

The basic problem you are overlooking is that the outsourcing bypasses labor laws that are tightly coupled to the standard of living that is commonplace in the US. It is simply impossible to be price competitive when the employment rate in India is below what someone makes at the minimum wage here in the US. Do you honestly expect college-trained engineers with thirty years of experience to work below the minimum wage? Perhaps you expect us to reach the ripe age of 54, then retrain in what? Making picture frames?

Under these circumstances, people in this country are out of their minds if they attend engineering school now. This will place the US in the position of obtaining all high tech artifacts from third world suppliers, including the weapon systems that are supposed to make this Nation independent. Do you honestly think India and China are going to supply this Nation with first-line systems, or will they keep those for their own military? It won't take long before this Nation is a third world consumer.

BTW, establishing global independence of this nature is exactly how global governance can and will come to fruition.

Finally, I expect there is nothing about your job that makes you immune to outsourcing, unless you are a plumber or something. We all can't be plumbers. Others on this thread have pointed out that if you don't get upset when your fellow citizens' jobs are outsourced, there is nothing to stop yours from becoming history either. It boils down to what the Jews said following WWII: They came for the gypsies, but I wasn't a gypsy, so I didn't care. They came for the infirm, but I didn't care because I wasn't infirm. They came for the outspoken, but I didn't care because I was not outspoken. They came for the intellectuals, but I didn't care because I wasn't an intellectual. When they came for me, there was nobody left to care.

44 posted on 02/04/2004 12:11:44 PM PST by GingisK
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To: RightWhale
. So what now?

The future is the way they live in Mexico, or Peru, or Pakistan. Get used to the idea of living in a third world country. The decision has been made to place you there. You seem to accept the idea, because you sure do accept the implementation.

The solution: Say "To hell with the rest of the world". Keep our manufacturing and the jobs in this country, and let the others build their Nations they same way we built ours: By building our own Nation.

When a company places a factory in a third world country, let the products be sold in that country at price appropriate for that country. Prohibit those products from being imported for use here until that local standard of living matches our own. The world's economy really can be built up without destroying own own.

45 posted on 02/04/2004 12:21:44 PM PST by GingisK
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To: RightWhale
Please tell me I don't have to write LISP code, I like C and java. But I'll do Cobol, fortran or even Basic if I have to, (Ada and pascal with a gun to my head) but LISP. I don't know jack about LISP and have heard it sucks.
46 posted on 02/04/2004 12:25:08 PM PST by jpsb (Nominated 1994 "Worst writer on the net")
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To: GingisK
The solution: Say "To hell with the rest of the world". Keep our manufacturing and the jobs in this country

Don't expect a repeat or a continuation of the American Industrial Revolution. That was a one time event and it isn't coming back. Vigorous space development could be the replacement, but it's not being set up correctly.

47 posted on 02/04/2004 12:30:44 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: jpsb
JAVA is good at this time. Aside from that it probably doesn't matter which language is used. Use libraries or create your own device drivers. Who knows, maybe some fast machine language drivers would be marketable.
48 posted on 02/04/2004 12:34:54 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: ninenot
Last night I was troubleshooting AOL software on my uncle's computer. The tech was in India.
49 posted on 02/04/2004 12:37:54 PM PST by Vision (Always Faithful)
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To: RightWhale
Just picked up Robot Building for Beginners
by David Cook. Thanks for the encouragement, been wantng to do something like this for a long time. I am a working programmer and hopefully my job is safe but knowing enbedded programming and Robotics would be a big plus. Also I own a bar so my customers can have a good time "testing" my robats. It will be fun.
50 posted on 02/04/2004 12:39:52 PM PST by jpsb (Nominated 1994 "Worst writer on the net")
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To: jpsb
Aha! Excellent opportunity for a young 'bot to learn to mix and serve drinks and also keep the dish of salted nuts replenished. Not to mention keeping the bar wiped up.
51 posted on 02/04/2004 12:42:33 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: RightWhale
My thinking exactly.
52 posted on 02/04/2004 12:46:59 PM PST by jpsb (Nominated 1994 "Worst writer on the net")
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To: RightWhale
Vigorous space development could be the replacement...

Space engineering is engineering. The application is space vehicles. The design principles and the operations are unchanged from any other device that uses mechanical equipment under the control of electronics. Engineering for space can also be outsourced. Knowledge of robotics won't make you special.

I've been in software for over thirty years. I do not program web pages or windows. I write code for embedded devices ... everything from remote telemetry, servo-driven motion control (robotics), process control, and so on. Some of this experience was on the Skylab project.

Robotics envolves writing algorithms that takes into account the length of moment arms, joint geometry, inertial ballistics, and coordinating the timing of multiple movements. The software for this is mature and is "shrink-wrapped", as the marketeers say. Applying that software to a new machine is a "drag and drop" process with dialog boxes to supply the length of momemt arms, mass distribution, gear reduction ratios, and so on.

This leaves the mechanical design of the remotely-operated gizmo. Reading a few books from amazon is a good start, but the number of jobs in such desciplines is very small. Expect them to screen for these positions using multiple Phds and years of experience.

NASA generally hires Phds from brand-name schools, usually following miltary/areospace employment. Actual space hardware is contracted to established companies like Lockheed, Boeing, General Dynamics, etc. Nationwide there are currently about 150 such jobs open, including non-areospace. Those jobs will be divided among those currently looking for such jobs and new graduates. Increased activity in the space industry will not increase the available job list to encompass the number of damn good people who are already out of work in those very engineering disciplines. There is no reason to expect those jobs to be reserved for American engineers.

Why do you think robotics is some special form of engineering for which there is a shortage of experts? That just is not the case.

53 posted on 02/04/2004 1:08:13 PM PST by GingisK
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To: jpsb
Please tell me I don't have to write LISP code...

LISP has no place in robotics.

54 posted on 02/04/2004 1:09:24 PM PST by GingisK
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To: jpsb
Shall I assume you can deduce for yourself what these sort of articles are all about?

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1056800/posts

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1057093/posts

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1064882/posts

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/929563/posts

There are many of these just on FreeRepublic.

55 posted on 02/04/2004 1:31:14 PM PST by GingisK
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To: Protagoras
"Actually we need to understand ... economics and freedom."

Agreed we do!!! We need to understand the implications of both. We need to understand history as well. We need to understand....


56 posted on 02/04/2004 1:35:51 PM PST by DannyTN
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To: GingisK
Fortunately I am not looking for jobs. This means I have my own business plan. I am also not looking at space business as it is. From its new mission statement, NASA has convinced me that space development will be primarily through robotics. Previously I had assumed that men would be working in space. The robots I would need to do the work I envision are not available, so there it is: I need to learn robotics so I can build my own robots. Some business considerations: no doubt not many programmers would be needed, and I can do like the rest and ignore the 1967 UN Outer Space Treaty. The path is clear.
57 posted on 02/04/2004 1:37:18 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: spacewarp
US out of the UN / WTO / NAFTA / etc. Two lists, true allies and all others, do business only with true allies. Reduce immigration of unskilled and undereducated individuals to a trickle. Slash social spending and lower taxes. Abolish the EPA, and nullify all opressive hiring and firing laws. Start up a national militia and require them in all 50 states; all able bodied men, ages 18 - 54 must join if not already in the military. Rescope the ABM system upward to be able to successfully blunt a worst case combined Russian and Chinese nuclear attack. Open the ANWR to exploration and extraction. Start programs to increase ICBM subs by 400 %, increase land based ICBMs by 500% (including addition of mobility for existing types of large ICBMs and the addition of a Midgetman, this time deployed on a proper TEL not some stupid sled) and put strategic bombers back on alert. Ban abortion, homosexual marriage and selected other behaviors that were illegal prior to 1950. Vastly increase the tax exemption amounts for children. Ban the Dept of Education and gut the gutless liberal swill from our schools. Ban union membership for all government employees including teachers. Reclaim the Panama Canal. Restart SEATO and negotiate to get the bases back in the Philippines and Thailand. Destroy the Cuban Communists. Enforce existing treason laws.
58 posted on 02/04/2004 1:47:45 PM PST by GOP_1900AD (Un-PC even to "Conservatives!" - Right makes right)
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To: ninenot
"...enterprises which compete directly with the US taxpayer."

Yes, enterprises just like these. How long do you think we unincarcerted citizens can compete with domestic workers who get 35 cents an hour and whose bosses don't have to worry about workmen's comp, employment taxes, FICA and all the other "bennies" that private companies have to deal with?

59 posted on 02/04/2004 1:50:00 PM PST by Middle Man (Use the Internet to make government transparent)
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To: DannyTN
Ping.
60 posted on 02/04/2004 1:50:08 PM PST by GOP_1900AD (Un-PC even to "Conservatives!" - Right makes right)
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