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America Is Preparing Kids For The Future As Servants
EconomyInCrisis.org ^ | 12/21/06 | Thomas Heffner

Posted on 04/18/2007 7:59:30 AM PDT by A. Pole

In the 1950's 30% of US employees were in manufacturing - almost 1 in 3 jobs. This country was a relative manufacturing super power, we were the world's richest and most productive country. In 1994 approximately 1 in 8 jobs were in manufacturing. In 2014 if the US government (Bureau of Labor Statistics) projections are accurate that figure will have slipped to 1 in 12 jobs.

The government is telling us in black and white that the policies they are enacting will decrease both absolute and relative manufacturing employment to levels below that of the 1950's - over 2 million below.

In less than 20 years since America put in place some of its most self-devastating policy decisions (NAFTA, WTO, CAFTA, etc.), this country will have almost completely converted from a self-sufficient sovereign state, capable of manufacturing what it needs to sustain and protect itself, to a country of servants – serfs, working at the behest of foreign employers or engaged in the sales, marketing, and distribution of foreign-made goods – working at their discretion, for wages they determine, and forced to pay their prices for needed goods. This is the definition of a servant.

A country that ends up producing little of value will have little to consume at home and little to trade abroad, and will have a low standard of living. The way this country was built was by developing world-leading industries and dominating the markets for products that we invented. Now we have conceded that we are instead going to exist by selling our assets and eliminate most of our ability to produce for ourselves. This would make any country extremely vulnerable.

From 1994-2004, manufacturing was the second fastest job-losing sector in our economy (second only to agricultural employment). From 2004-2014, the government predicts that most of the employment growth will come from retail, health care, leisure and hospitality, government jobs, and “professional and business services.”

This country needs salespeople, waiters, attorneys, doctors, and managers. But how could we have ever built a superpower country on those professions alone?

Many say that we are shipping jobs overseas because they are too low-paying or too rudimentary. Anyone who has worked in factory operating a million-dollar piece of equipment can tell you the satisfying difference from being forced to work in a restaurant as a waiter because of lack of alternatives. Why would we send factory jobs overseas to replace them with jobs in retail and hospitality? Factories sustain communities. Retail and hospitality enriches absentee corporations and shareholders. Offshore outsourcing strips us of technology, taxes, profits, and career opportunities. Why would we choose that path as manufacturing jobs pay much more on average than service jobs?

Some other countries, like Japan, pay wages as high as or higher than America because their manufacturing is capital and knowledge intensive and requires fewer workers per unit of output. In addition, other countries like China that pay wages as low as 1/10 of ours, also does not have the same cost of living as the US. Their goods cost a fraction of what they cost here in America; therefore it is not possible to compare the wages on an absolute basis.

Many people also say education is the key. They say that not enough Americans are being trained for engineering, science, or production occupations. There is no point in educating people when there are no jobs – when these industries are being systematically and predatorily destroyed by foreign subsidized competition producing and operating both externally and here in this country through insourcing.

We are living in a fool’s paradise, being propped up by foreign loans to our government and foreign subsidized consumption of our incredulous trade deficits which is approaching $800 billion ($1.6 million per minute) this year alone..

The net takeaway of the Bureau of Labor Statistics report is that if you expect to earn a decent living by producing a product – any product – in this next 10 years, you will have little opportunity to do that in this country.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: cheaplabor; china; deficit; immigration; japan; jobs; manufacturing; technology; trade
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To: Freedom4US
Don’t think that agriculture won’t get outsourced. I can’t think of any particular reason why not.

This process cannot go for ever. Exchange equilibrium of material goods will be restored, one way or another. Only very small countries can live by services and even Swiss make watches, chocolate, dairy and many other physical products.

So far US agriculture is protected by government, it might survive until time of correction.

101 posted on 04/18/2007 7:16:01 PM PDT by A. Pole (Hush Bimbo: "Low wage is good for you!")
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To: A. Pole
Go with your instincts. However, nobody in any field has a stable career anymore. Especially in medicine, things change so quickly you will be spending your career continually educating yourself as to the latest techniques and newest technologies. To be able to succeed you will need to be able to adapt. That is my point.

If you don't believe me or think differently, then go with your instincts. I am merely giving you the same advise I give my student advisees. Some take it, some don't. No big deal. It's just my opinion.

102 posted on 04/18/2007 7:53:41 PM PDT by massadvj
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To: massadvj
Go with your instincts.

Putting aside our private concrete lives, the general question is how much instability the whole society or culture can take before things fall apart or order is imposed by force.

103 posted on 04/18/2007 7:57:24 PM PDT by A. Pole (Hush Bimbo: "Low wage is good for you!")
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To: TheRiverNile

I think you should seek professional help. Seriously. It’s a big jump to say that fewer government regulations will cause the U.S. to turn into Nazi Germany.


104 posted on 04/18/2007 8:06:43 PM PDT by Dat
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To: A. Pole
In less than 20 years since America put in place some of its most self-devastating policy decisions (NAFTA, WTO, CAFTA, etc.), this country will have almost completely converted from a self-sufficient sovereign state, capable of manufacturing what it needs to sustain and protect itself, to a country of servants – serfs, working at the behest of foreign employers or engaged in the sales, marketing, and distribution of foreign-made goods – working at their discretion, for wages they determine, and forced to pay their prices for needed goods. This is the definition of a servant.

This is the liberal utopia they're working towards. If everyone is a serf (except the liberal leaders, of course), then society has achieved equality and won the class war dem politicians are always going on about.

105 posted on 04/18/2007 8:09:45 PM PDT by highlander_UW (I don't know what my future holds, but I know Who holds my future)
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To: A. Pole
The forces propelling us toward a faster-paced, faster-evolving civilization are irretrievable and unstoppable, even by martial law. The Chinese even see that. The iron curtain fell in large part because information cannot be contained between national borders. The global market diminishes the power and sovereignty of national governments and is therefore a good thing, IMHO.

But what I think does not matter so much as the reality that this train is moving and will not be stopped. It is far bigger than government, any government, including the US government. The US GDP is but 20 percent of the world economy.

The macro environment is what it is. In business we assume it is beyond our control. So we attempt to predict it, and manipulate those variables we do control so that we benefit from the anticipated changes. My suggestion to any young person today is to stop making value judgments about the macro environment. All change presents opportunity. Welcome the change, anticipate the changes coming next, and figure out how to benefit from them.

The best thing you can do for your society is to prosper.

106 posted on 04/18/2007 8:14:27 PM PDT by massadvj
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To: A. Pole
I think maybe the American worker has been a slave since American business became the nation's tax collector. Consider that if you work for a corporation that collects and pays into the tax system, that this is effectively no different than the corporation renting you from the government.

And you can't rent out what you don't own.

I think we've been chattel for a long time.

107 posted on 04/19/2007 1:34:10 AM PDT by The Duke (I have met the enemy, and he is named 'Apathy'!)
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