Trade agreements
On Thu, 15 Oct 2015 13:05:38 -0400, Keyser Söze
wrote:
On 10/15/15 12:49 PM, Califbill wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote:
I watched a report on MSNBC earlier today that blew my mind.
It focused on a port in California that handles 40 percent of
our import and export shipments to and from China.
First item of surprise:
60 percent of the containers loaded with merchandise imported from
China are returned to China ... empty.
But the biggest surprise is what we are exporting *to* China in huge
qualities.
Trash.
The report showed mountains of recyclable plastic bottles, cardboard,
scrap metal and other trash items that are loaded up and set to China.
China's workers recycle it, making insulated clothing items from the
plastic bottles and cardboard and items like smartphones from the scrap
aluminum and metals, then ship them back to the USA for sale back to us.
Back in the 50's we loaded our scrap steel on scrap ships, and they towed
them to Japan for processing. I guess we are to expensive to do do any
real labor. My dad's company did a lot of the work of cutting huge holes
in the decks of ships, which was filled with scrap and then welding the
deck section back in. As well,as welding the rudder straight and the prop
shaft from turning. Seems as will be even better economically for other
countries if we keep raising minimum wages.
We always had three small "dumpster" like containers behind the boat
shop, one for iron and steel, one for aluminum, and one for
brass-bronze-copper, and these were for the busted parts of boats,
motors, scooters, trailers, et cetera, and were "saved" for the monthly
pickup by a local scrap dealer, who would take them to his yard and then
send my dad a check for whatever the agreed-upon value per pound was.
These weren't the huge dumpsters you see nowadays, but maybe a third as
big. Pistons, blocks, drive shafts, broken "pot metal", busted props not
worth repairing, fasteners, control wires stripped out of their covers,
busted wheels. In those days, the scrap metal was then loaded onto rail
cars and shipped off to smelters in the USA to be reprocessed for
materials for new parts "made in the USA." I'm sure some of it was also
shipped to foreign countries.
I talked to one of the scrappers here and he said most of the sorted
scrap metal gets used in the US but mixed scrap is exported
I don't know how much that is actually true and whether it is just the
local disposition but it sounds reasonable. He gets the whole family
around and they take stuff like white goods apart, separating as much
of the high value stuff out as they can for the best price. He said
they could strip a washing machine down in 10 minutes, taking the
motors and solenoids apart for the copper, separating the aluminum
from the steel and getting rid of all the plastic. Most of it was just
working with a screw gun.
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