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Steve Daniels, Seek of Spam October 21st 03 05:49 AM

Importing
 


Does anyone know what issues surround buying a boat in Canada and
bringing it into the United States?

Jeff Morris October 21st 03 01:06 PM

Importing
 
If you buy new, the builder should prepare all the paperwork. I'm not even sure what it
is, since all I saw was the normal builder's certificate used for documentation, but I
think some other paper got filed by an import agent. When we called Immigration in Oswego
they told us nothing had to be done for the boat - we had been warned they would assume
this was a small boat, so we then called Customs. The met us in Phoenix (about 3 hours
down the canal), looked over the boat, and charged us $25 for a sticker.

This was all pre-9/11. I've heard you can no longer do Immigration with the "picture
phone." If its is used boat you should call customs to see just what they require.
Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.

-jeff

"Steve Daniels, Seek of Spam" wrote in message
...


Does anyone know what issues surround buying a boat in Canada and
bringing it into the United States?




Capt. Mooron October 21st 03 10:26 PM

Importing
 
WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when buying in
the US and importing to Canada.

CM

"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message

| Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.



Jeff Morris October 21st 03 11:20 PM

Importing
 
So why didn't I have to pay anything? I even have a piece of paper signed by the customs
official that says duty free.



"Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
...
WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when buying in
the US and importing to Canada.

CM

"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message

| Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.





johnh October 22nd 03 02:34 AM

Importing
 
I bought my boat in BC, Canada 3 years ago. There was *no* duty to be paid
if the boat was built in the USA or in Canada. There were also no Canadian
taxes to be paid, but the broker told me that in order to avoid the Canadian
taxes, they had to deliver the boat to me in the U.S. and I had to take
possession here. The sale and transfer was all simple with no
complications. A delivery captain brought the boat down from Vancouver to
Blain for a minimal charge, customs brought their sniffer dogs on board and
I took possession in a bout 30 min.


"Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
...
WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when buying in
the US and importing to Canada.

CM

"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message

| Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.





katysails October 22nd 03 03:25 AM

Importing
 

WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when buying =
in
the US and importing to Canada.

CM

It's a wash when you trade it for the VAT.
--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


SGD November 12th 03 04:25 PM

Importing
 
Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of origin).
You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US origin.
Brokers can handle it all.


"Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
...
WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when buying in
the US and importing to Canada.

CM

"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message

| Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.






Capt. Mooron November 12th 03 05:22 PM

Importing
 
If it's a Canadian built vessel coming from the USA... Canadian Customs
advised my friend that duties may be imposed.

CM

"SGD" wrote in message
...
| Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of
origin).
| You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US origin.
| Brokers can handle it all.
|
|
| "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| ...
| WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when buying
in
| the US and importing to Canada.
|
| CM
|
| "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
|
| | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
|
|
|
|
|



Jeff Morris November 12th 03 05:24 PM

Importing
 
Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety of other countries are duty free.
But please, consult with Customs on this.

http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf


--
-jeff

"SGD" wrote in message ...
Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of origin).
You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US origin.
Brokers can handle it all.


"Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
...
WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when buying in
the US and importing to Canada.

CM

"Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message

| Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.








Bobsprit November 12th 03 05:27 PM

Importing
 
Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety of other
countries are duty free.

I was told that the Beneteau's tend to be packed with doody and the owners full
of it.

Okay, Donal...Grow up!

RB

Capt. Mooron November 12th 03 05:45 PM

Importing
 
I'll make sure to make that available to Canadian Customs.... which says
duties may be imposed.

Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any sense when
both signators have a reasonably close GDP.

CM




"Jeff Morris" wrote in message
...
| Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety of
other countries are duty free.
| But please, consult with Customs on this.
|
| http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf
|
|
| --
| -jeff
|
| "SGD" wrote in message
...
| Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of
origin).
| You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US origin.
| Brokers can handle it all.
|
|
| "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| ...
| WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when
buying in
| the US and importing to Canada.
|
| CM
|
| "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
|
| | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|



Jonathan Ganz November 12th 03 05:53 PM

Importing
 
That would be something like California and Britain.

Does Canada have a GDP? :-)

"Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
...
I'll make sure to make that available to Canadian Customs.... which says
duties may be imposed.

Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any sense when
both signators have a reasonably close GDP.

CM




"Jeff Morris" wrote in message
...
| Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety of
other countries are duty free.
| But please, consult with Customs on this.
|
| http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf
|
|
| --
| -jeff
|
| "SGD" wrote in message
...
| Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of
origin).
| You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US origin.
| Brokers can handle it all.
|
|
| "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| ...
| WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when
buying in
| the US and importing to Canada.
|
| CM
|
| "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
|
| | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|





Jeff Morris November 12th 03 06:04 PM

Importing
 
That file describes duties for bringing products into the USA; I have no idea if the
tariffs are reciprocal.

And I'm baffled at the concept of Canada charging a tariff on a boat that was built in
Canada.

So what don't you like about free trade? Should I have had to pay US Customs a few
thousand buck for buying a Canadian boat? I would think that free trade does more to help
the Canadian builders than to hurt them.



"Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
...
I'll make sure to make that available to Canadian Customs.... which says
duties may be imposed.

Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any sense when
both signators have a reasonably close GDP.

CM




"Jeff Morris" wrote in message
...
| Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety of
other countries are duty free.
| But please, consult with Customs on this.
|
| http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf
|
|
| --
| -jeff
|
| "SGD" wrote in message
...
| Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of
origin).
| You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US origin.
| Brokers can handle it all.
|
|
| "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| ...
| WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when
buying in
| the US and importing to Canada.
|
| CM
|
| "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
|
| | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|





Capt. Mooron November 12th 03 11:14 PM

Importing
 
A million and a half in Maple Syrup and Back Bacon alone!

CM

"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
...
| That would be something like California and Britain.
|
| Does Canada have a GDP? :-)
|
| "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| ...
| I'll make sure to make that available to Canadian Customs.... which
says
| duties may be imposed.
|
| Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any sense
when
| both signators have a reasonably close GDP.
|
| CM
|
|
|
|
| "Jeff Morris" wrote in message
| ...
| | Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety of
| other countries are duty free.
| | But please, consult with Customs on this.
| |
| | http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf
| |
| |
| | --
| | -jeff
| |
| | "SGD" wrote in message
| ...
| | Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of
| origin).
| | You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US
origin.
| | Brokers can handle it all.
| |
| |
| | "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| | ...
| | WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when
| buying in
| | the US and importing to Canada.
| |
| | CM
| |
| | "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
| |
| | | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
|
|
|
|



Capt. Mooron November 12th 03 11:17 PM

Importing
 
It does more to screw the local population having to compete with prices
willing to be paid by a more affluent US consumer. It does nothing to stem
protectionist tariffs and duties arbitrarily imposed by the US against
Canadian goods.

We gain nothing from Free Trade....

CM

"Jeff Morris" wrote in message
...
| That file describes duties for bringing products into the USA; I have no
idea if the
| tariffs are reciprocal.
|
| And I'm baffled at the concept of Canada charging a tariff on a boat that
was built in
| Canada.
|
| So what don't you like about free trade? Should I have had to pay US
Customs a few
| thousand buck for buying a Canadian boat? I would think that free trade
does more to help
| the Canadian builders than to hurt them.
|
|
|
| "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| ...
| I'll make sure to make that available to Canadian Customs.... which
says
| duties may be imposed.
|
| Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any sense
when
| both signators have a reasonably close GDP.
|
| CM
|
|
|
|
| "Jeff Morris" wrote in message
| ...
| | Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety of
| other countries are duty free.
| | But please, consult with Customs on this.
| |
| | http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf
| |
| |
| | --
| | -jeff
| |
| | "SGD" wrote in message
| ...
| | Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of
| origin).
| | You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US
origin.
| | Brokers can handle it all.
| |
| |
| | "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| | ...
| | WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when
| buying in
| | the US and importing to Canada.
| |
| | CM
| |
| | "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
| |
| | | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
|
|
|
|



The_navigator© November 12th 03 11:35 PM

Importing
 
Is that a gross domestic product?

Cheers MC

Capt. Mooron wrote:

A million and a half in Maple Syrup and Back Bacon alone!

CM

"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
...
| That would be something like California and Britain.
|
| Does Canada have a GDP? :-)
|
| "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| ...
| I'll make sure to make that available to Canadian Customs.... which
says
| duties may be imposed.
|
| Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any sense
when
| both signators have a reasonably close GDP.
|
| CM
|
|
|
|
| "Jeff Morris" wrote in message
| ...
| | Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety of
| other countries are duty free.
| | But please, consult with Customs on this.
| |
| | http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf
| |
| |
| | --
| | -jeff
| |
| | "SGD" wrote in message
| ...
| | Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country of
| origin).
| | You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US
origin.
| | Brokers can handle it all.
| |
| |
| | "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| | ...
| | WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way when
| buying in
| | the US and importing to Canada.
| |
| | CM
| |
| | "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
| |
| | | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
|
|
|
|




Capt. Mooron November 13th 03 12:30 AM

Importing
 
It's not gross at all....

CM

"The_navigator©" wrote in message
...
| Is that a gross domestic product?
|
| Cheers MC
|
| Capt. Mooron wrote:
|
| A million and a half in Maple Syrup and Back Bacon alone!
|
| CM
|
| "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
| ...
| | That would be something like California and Britain.
| |
| | Does Canada have a GDP? :-)
| |
| | "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| | ...
| | I'll make sure to make that available to Canadian Customs.... which
| says
| | duties may be imposed.
| |
| | Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any
sense
| when
| | both signators have a reasonably close GDP.
| |
| | CM
| |
| |
| |
| |
| | "Jeff Morris" wrote in message
| | ...
| | | Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety
of
| | other countries are duty free.
| | | But please, consult with Customs on this.
| | |
| | | http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf
| | |
| | |
| | | --
| | | -jeff
| | |
| | | "SGD" wrote in message
| | ...
| | | Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country
of
| | origin).
| | | You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US
| origin.
| | | Brokers can handle it all.
| | |
| | |
| | | "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| | | ...
| | | WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way
when
| | buying in
| | | the US and importing to Canada.
| | |
| | | CM
| | |
| | | "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
| | |
| | | | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| |
| |
| |
| |
|
|
|



The_navigator© November 13th 03 12:35 AM

Importing
 
Exactly.

Cheers MC

Capt. Mooron wrote:

It's not gross at all....

CM

"The_navigator©" wrote in message
...
| Is that a gross domestic product?
|
| Cheers MC
|
| Capt. Mooron wrote:
|
| A million and a half in Maple Syrup and Back Bacon alone!
|
| CM
|
| "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
| ...
| | That would be something like California and Britain.
| |
| | Does Canada have a GDP? :-)
| |
| | "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| | ...
| | I'll make sure to make that available to Canadian Customs.... which
| says
| | duties may be imposed.
| |
| | Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any
sense
| when
| | both signators have a reasonably close GDP.
| |
| | CM
| |
| |
| |
| |
| | "Jeff Morris" wrote in message
| | ...
| | | Wrong. Recreational yachts built in Canada, Mexico, and a variety
of
| | other countries are duty free.
| | | But please, consult with Customs on this.
| | |
| | | http://dataweb.usitc.gov/scripts/tariff/0310c89.pdf
| | |
| | |
| | | --
| | | -jeff
| | |
| | | "SGD" wrote in message
| | ...
| | | Duties will be levied for a canadian made (or any other country
of
| | origin).
| | | You won't have to pay duties on a used US boat because it's US
| origin.
| | | Brokers can handle it all.
| | |
| | |
| | | "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message
| | | ...
| | | WRONG! There will indeed be duty to be paid. It's that way
when
| | buying in
| | | the US and importing to Canada.
| | |
| | | CM
| | |
| | | "Jeff Morris" jeffmo@NoSpam-sv-lokiDOTcom wrote in message
| | |
| | | | Because of NAFTA, there should be no duties.
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| |
| |
| |
| |
|
|
|




katysails November 13th 03 06:07 AM

Importing
 
Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any sense =
when
both signators have a reasonably close GDP.

Since we've shipped all our industry to Mexico since NAFTA and done =
ourselves in economically, I have to agree...

--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


katysails November 13th 03 06:08 AM

Importing
 
Is that a gross domestic product?

The bacon can be pretty gross at times...depends on how fat the pig =
was...

--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


Jonathan Ganz November 13th 03 08:18 AM

Importing
 
Actually, we're the most productive workers on the planet.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
Free Trade sucks so much backwash! I hate it! It only makes any sense when
both signators have a reasonably close GDP.

Since we've shipped all our industry to Mexico since NAFTA and done
ourselves in economically, I have to agree...

--
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein



katysails November 13th 03 12:02 PM

Importing
 
Actually, we're the most productive workers on the planet.

Yes, we are, and that has nothing to do with it. We are also the most =
highly paid productive workers on the planet which makes the profit =
margins for corporations shrink...so they are moving to Mexico where =
labor isn't quite as productive but is way, way cheaper.

--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


Jonathan Ganz November 13th 03 05:53 PM

Importing
 
Ultimately, the only way to improve the situation is for US
workers to be even more productive. Protection won't work
in the long term.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
Actually, we're the most productive workers on the planet.

Yes, we are, and that has nothing to do with it. We are also the most
highly paid productive workers on the planet which makes the profit margins
for corporations shrink...so they are moving to Mexico where labor isn't
quite as productive but is way, way cheaper.

--
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein



Vito November 14th 03 01:27 PM

Importing
 
Jonathan Ganz wrote:

Ultimately, the only way to improve the situation is for US
workers to be even more productive. ...


Unfortunately, it's not that simple.

The bottom line is what an item costs to produce, which includes labor
but many other costs we'd rather ignore. For example, our draconian
environmental statutes add more to production costs than does labor for
many industrial operations such as chrome plating. These regulations are
a major reason heavy industry has fled the U.S. Moreover, increasing
per-worker productivity requires automation which costs money and itself
puts people out of work. That new robomachine that allows one operator
to do the work of ten not only costs big bucks, which must be added to
the items it produces, but puts nine workers on the street. It may be
more profitable to move to a 3rd world country than raise the capital to
buy the new machine, especially if buying it means downsizing anyway.

Now consider what happens when productivity becomes so high that
everything is made by machines, without labor. Without jobs, nobody can
buy anything and without sales there are no profits and ...

Jonathan Ganz November 14th 03 05:39 PM

Importing
 
Come on... I suppose you'd rather have the heavy industries
back, pumping their filth into the air around *your* home and
killing *your* kids.

Give me a break. Also, your assumption that automation
will eliminate jobs was debunked in the 50s. It's just not
true. Automation will eliminate *some* jobs, but others
are created. We need to be knowledge workers not laborers.

"Vito" wrote in message
...
Jonathan Ganz wrote:

Ultimately, the only way to improve the situation is for US
workers to be even more productive. ...


Unfortunately, it's not that simple.

The bottom line is what an item costs to produce, which includes labor
but many other costs we'd rather ignore. For example, our draconian
environmental statutes add more to production costs than does labor for
many industrial operations such as chrome plating. These regulations are
a major reason heavy industry has fled the U.S. Moreover, increasing
per-worker productivity requires automation which costs money and itself
puts people out of work. That new robomachine that allows one operator
to do the work of ten not only costs big bucks, which must be added to
the items it produces, but puts nine workers on the street. It may be
more profitable to move to a 3rd world country than raise the capital to
buy the new machine, especially if buying it means downsizing anyway.

Now consider what happens when productivity becomes so high that
everything is made by machines, without labor. Without jobs, nobody can
buy anything and without sales there are no profits and ...




DSK November 14th 03 07:53 PM

Importing
 


Vito wrote:

...... For example, our draconian
environmental statutes add more to production costs than does labor for
many industrial operations such as chrome plating. These regulations are
a major reason heavy industry has fled the U.S.


Umm, yeah right. Let's have more mercury & lead in the water, great idea.

IMHO the part of NAFTA which was actually *good* was the part where we were
not going to export pollution, ie any plants that moved directly overseas
and did not have similar environmental controls (there was a 2600 page book
on just this alone) would have tariffs imposed equal to the price of the
skipped pollution controls.


Now consider what happens when productivity becomes so high that
everything is made by machines, without labor. Without jobs, nobody can
buy anything and without sales there are no profits and ...


That's part of why the economy tends to move in cycles, boom or bust.

DSK



Vito November 14th 03 10:29 PM

Importing
 
Jonathan Ganz wrote:

Come on... I suppose you'd rather have the heavy industries
back, pumping their filth into the air around *your* home and
killing *your* kids.


Good news: I have no kids at home. Bad news: I've had to quit riding
motorcycles because of all the trucks spraying imported wet garbage up
and down the roads hereabouths. A nice chrome plating shop dumping a few
poisons would be more welcome but the mob isn't interested in chrome
shops. But that's beside the point, which is that if we want local
employers to be able to compete with foreign companies that don't have
to abide by our expensive laws then we'll have to tax imports to level
the playing field.

Give me a break.


OK, arm or leg? (c:

.... Also, your assumption that automation will eliminate jobs was debunked in the 50s.


Yup, by propagandists fighting communism. Yasee capitalism is a great
system but it will inevitably be killed by the same advancing technology
that gave it birth and then what. Some prefer Naziism, others Communism
and still others to stick their heads in the sand in denial. Me? I'm too
old to care.


It's just not true. Automation will eliminate *some* jobs, but others
are created. We need to be knowledge workers not laborers.


The flaw in your theory is that the jobs automation creates require ever
more intellegence and education than an ever growing part of the
population can provide. Not everyone can be a rocket scientist or MD
even if they wanted to. When I graduated from High School half the class
went to work at the Ford plant and the other half at the aircraft plant,
all earning enough to buy homes and raise families. Less than 1 in 10
went to college and most of them flunked out. Those factory jobs are now
done better and cheaper by machines. Ditto ever more "professional"
jobs. There was a big demand for EEs til large scale integration came
along. Then they became computer programmers, until high level languages
came along. Then they became unemployed. I guess they should have got
honest jobs as lawyers or ministers, right?

Of course there are still plenty of jobs for kids getting out of high
school today - at McDonalds and Wendys and Buggerking - but unless you
are in the top half of the population and motivated and financed enough
to get at least a BS don't expect to earn a living. Tomarrow ....

If you had an *average* 15 year old kid what would you encourage him/her
to do today?

Jonathan Ganz November 15th 03 12:13 AM

Importing
 
If we want local employers to be more competitive,
we should allow them to fail or survive by their own
designs (with a bit of encouragement from the gov't).

Very good news... :-)

Good news: I have no kids at home. Bad news: I've had to quit riding
motorcycles because of all the trucks spraying imported wet garbage up
and down the roads hereabouths. A nice chrome plating shop dumping a few
poisons would be more welcome but the mob isn't interested in chrome
shops. But that's beside the point, which is that if we want local
employers to be able to compete with foreign companies that don't have
to abide by our expensive laws then we'll have to tax imports to level
the playing field.


I was thinking coffee break....

Give me a break.


OK, arm or leg? (c:

.... Also, your assumption that automation will eliminate jobs was

debunked in the 50s.

We're not currently using capitalism, so failure isn't really an option.

Yup, by propagandists fighting communism. Yasee capitalism is a great
system but it will inevitably be killed by the same advancing technology
that gave it birth and then what. Some prefer Naziism, others Communism
and still others to stick their heads in the sand in denial. Me? I'm too
old to care.


Not a flaw at all. One must constantly relearn and reeducate oneself
to remain valuable. What you did years ago and how you survived or
didn't isn't really related to professions or education today. Same goes
for me, but I have a science and literature education, which means I can
do most anything badly. :-}

Watch the lawyere crack... my mom's a lawyer and she's quite honest
and ethical, or so the stories go.

It's just not true. Automation will eliminate *some* jobs, but others
are created. We need to be knowledge workers not laborers.


The flaw in your theory is that the jobs automation creates require ever
more intellegence and education than an ever growing part of the
population can provide. Not everyone can be a rocket scientist or MD
even if they wanted to. When I graduated from High School half the class
went to work at the Ford plant and the other half at the aircraft plant,
all earning enough to buy homes and raise families. Less than 1 in 10
went to college and most of them flunked out. Those factory jobs are now
done better and cheaper by machines. Ditto ever more "professional"
jobs. There was a big demand for EEs til large scale integration came
along. Then they became computer programmers, until high level languages
came along. Then they became unemployed. I guess they should have got
honest jobs as lawyers or ministers, right?


A BS or a BA is still valuable not so much for the actual degree, but for
the testament to actually finishing something. That's a lot of what
employers
look for in new grads.
Of course there are still plenty of jobs for kids getting out of high
school today - at McDonalds and Wendys and Buggerking - but unless you
are in the top half of the population and motivated and financed enough
to get at least a BS don't expect to earn a living. Tomarrow ....


I would tell them to find something they love to do, something they're
really
interested in doing and pursue that. If they're unsure, then experiment with
different things when they get to college (no off-color or drug puns
intended).
I doesn't matter an iota what they pick, as long as they're motivated. If
it's
science or medicine, great. If it's being the best at repairing cars, that's
great
too. My mechanic works 3 days a week, 4-5 hours a day. He makes tons
of money.. if that's what motivates him, which I doubt. I think he's
motivated
by excellence.


If you had an *average* 15 year old kid what would you encourage him/her
to do today?




Schoonertrash November 15th 03 04:09 AM

Importing
 
Throw a shoe into the machinery?



Terry Spragg November 20th 03 04:09 PM

Importing
 


Vito wrote:

Jonathan Ganz wrote:

Ultimately, the only way to improve the situation is for US
workers to be even more productive. ...


Unfortunately, it's not that simple.

The bottom line is what an item costs to produce, which includes labor
but many other costs we'd rather ignore. For example, our draconian
environmental statutes add more to production costs than does labor for
many industrial operations such as chrome plating. These regulations are
a major reason heavy industry has fled the U.S. Moreover, increasing
per-worker productivity requires automation which costs money and itself
puts people out of work. That new robomachine that allows one operator
to do the work of ten not only costs big bucks, which must be added to
the items it produces, but puts nine workers on the street. It may be
more profitable to move to a 3rd world country than raise the capital to
buy the new machine, especially if buying it means downsizing anyway.

Now consider what happens when productivity becomes so high that
everything is made by machines, without labor. Without jobs, nobody can
buy anything and without sales there are no profits and ...


I believe it was Isaac Asimov who wrote a story about such a
world. In that world, poor people were forced to eat, drink, and
consume TVs, cars, clothes, etc,etc. A poor person was fat and
busy 'working' all day at destrying his appliances, clothes, etc,
while only the rich could hire people to consume their quota, and
had any liesure.

Until some po' folk decided to use robots to consume for him!

It's a little silly, but robotic production does imply that soon,
there will be no work for anyone!

That is where the redistribution of wealth, welfare, and the
service economy came from. Tax the robots, until they revolt?

The only reason there is any want anywhere in the world is
because some of those (most?) who run industry seem to think that
the way to 'win' is to either get richer than their niegbours, or
to make them all poorer by any way they can.

What value are huge numbers in a bank account?

Conspicuous consumption, overpowering competitive urges, and
status seeking is the real enemy.

Governmental departments are full of people motivated to
aggrandize their departments, and seek control over their
patrons. Tax and revenue departments are the same, even with
'free trade.' Screwing those you don't like becomes a sport for
some. Making people pay uneccessary tax is a feather in some
(dunce?) caps, on the same low par with racial discrimination.

True humility and service is the solution. A tiny home made
sailboat or land sailer in every garage, right next to the
chicken coop, could pacify the world. Status would come from
getting the most from the least. I favour roller skates and
'smart' umbrellas, or inflatable catamaran water skiis and an
inflated, semi-rigid wing sail, all built around a folding lawn
chair with led navigation lights and micro power personal
stereos.
Sell your tungsten stocks, now.

There should be no taxes paid, if all governments want to spend
on is war. Voter revolution and free universal health care are
the answer, under the guise of fair weights and measures and
purity laws. Tax rich businesses' profits, not poor people. Vive
liberty! Brainwash the young! The hand that rocks the cradle
rules the world! Women, this is all your fault, you should have
taken over the world long ago!

Well, maybe they did, and vanity rules clandestinely, blamed on
men, while women cultivate inheritances? Why DO women live
longer than men?

This thought is just a silly over extension of what should be
natural truth.

Outlaw lawns! Grow oats! A hydrogen balloon in every attic!
Solar cell and water preheater shingles on every roof! Insulate,
damn it! Evaporative air conditioners CAN replace trees! The
water cycle is the most important.

Ah! that felt good.

\
Bare it, and grin :-}
/

BTW, I just found out my new to me retriement mobile home cottage
mountainside back yard, never been logged, is about 1/5
evergreens, and most of those are hemlock. All those little
bushes are rare 'ground hemlock', supposedly the source for
taxol, an anti-cancer drug. It's the micro climate, rocky
mountain soil and river fog humidity, north east of a 500'
mountainette, I think. How much is a 2.5 foot butt hemlock tree
worth?


--
Terry K - My email address is MY PROPERTY, and is protected by
copyright legislation. Permission to reproduce it is
specifically denied for mass mailing and unrequested
solicitations. Reproduction or conveyance for any unauthorised
purpose is THEFT and PLAGIARISM. Abuse is Invasion of privacy
and harassment. Abusers may be prosecuted. -This notice footer
released to public domain. Spamspoof salad by spamchock -
SofDevCo


Terry Spragg November 20th 03 04:19 PM

Importing
 


Vito wrote:

Jonathan Ganz wrote:

Come on... I suppose you'd rather have the heavy industries
back, pumping their filth into the air around *your* home and
killing *your* kids.


Good news: I have no kids at home. Bad news: I've had to quit riding
motorcycles because of all the trucks spraying imported wet garbage up
and down the roads hereabouths.


Wassat???

A nice chrome plating shop dumping a few
poisons would be more welcome but the mob isn't interested in chrome
shops. But that's beside the point, which is that if we want local
employers to be able to compete with foreign companies that don't have
to abide by our expensive laws then we'll have to tax imports to level
the playing field.


Only when it can be shown that the furrin mfgrs actually do so?
Innocent until proved guilty is the basis for all law, or there
is no law, just anarchy.

Give me a break.


OK, arm or leg? (c:

.... Also, your assumption that automation will eliminate jobs was debunked in the 50s.


Yup, by propagandists fighting communism. Yasee capitalism is a great
system but it will inevitably be killed by the same advancing technology
that gave it birth and then what. Some prefer Naziism, others Communism
and still others to stick their heads in the sand in denial. Me? I'm too
old to care.

It's just not true. Automation will eliminate *some* jobs, but others
are created. We need to be knowledge workers not laborers.


The flaw in your theory is that the jobs automation creates require ever
more intellegence and education than an ever growing part of the
population can provide. Not everyone can be a rocket scientist or MD
even if they wanted to. When I graduated from High School half the class
went to work at the Ford plant and the other half at the aircraft plant,
all earning enough to buy homes and raise families. Less than 1 in 10
went to college and most of them flunked out. Those factory jobs are now
done better and cheaper by machines. Ditto ever more "professional"
jobs. There was a big demand for EEs til large scale integration came
along. Then they became computer programmers, until high level languages
came along. Then they became unemployed. I guess they should have got
honest jobs as lawyers or ministers, right?

Of course there are still plenty of jobs for kids getting out of high
school today - at McDonalds and Wendys and Buggerking - but unless you
are in the top half of the population and motivated and financed enough
to get at least a BS don't expect to earn a living. Tomarrow ....

If you had an *average* 15 year old kid what would you encourage him/her
to do today?


Get elected? No, seriously, how about elder care, since most
kids don't want to baby sit any more than their parents did?

Form a housing co-op, squat in the woods, get off the grid, and
grow vegetables and chickens! Make great arts and crafts. The
rich will always appreciate well made local crafts, including
entertainment. Outlaw recorded music broadcasts!

Sow, Reap.

--
Terry K - My email address is MY PROPERTY, and is protected by
copyright legislation. Permission to reproduce it is
specifically denied for mass mailing and unrequested
solicitations. Reproduction or conveyance for any unauthorised
purpose is THEFT and PLAGIARISM. Abuse is Invasion of privacy
and harassment. Abusers may be prosecuted. -This notice footer
released to public domain. Spamspoof salad by spamchock -
SofDevCo


DSK November 20th 03 05:53 PM

Importing
 
Terry Spragg wrote:


The only reason there is any want anywhere in the world is
because some of those (most?) who run industry seem to think that
the way to 'win' is to either get richer than their niegbours, or
to make them all poorer by any way they can.


Ahem... which world would that be? Over here in the real world, there is
'want' because resources are limited.

DSK


katysails November 20th 03 10:18 PM

Importing
 
If all the money (not material objects) was pooled and then divided by =
the world's population, what would the distribution look like? If =
everything was equalized how much would each individual own?

--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


The_navigator© November 20th 03 10:56 PM

Importing
 
$2. Of course I'd be dishing out the dosh...

;-P


Cheers MC

katysails wrote:

If all the money (not material objects) was pooled and then divided by the world's population, what would the distribution look like? If everything was equalized how much would each individual own?



Bob November 21st 03 12:54 AM

Importing
 
Hi katysails: Havn't seen you around for a long time. I'm seahag's brother in-law.

katysails wrote:

If all the money (not material objects) was pooled and then divided by the world's population, what would the distribution look like? If everything was equalized how much would each individual own?

--
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


--
Marine Worker, Composer, Artist
http://www.toad.net/~crm Check out my Galleries
and http://www.toad.net/~crm/neighborhood/index.htm "Peek into my neighborhood"
Jeeper! [Nelly Belle] [0||||0] YJ 93 Bob's your Uncle.



katysails November 21st 03 11:04 AM

Importing
 
Hi katysails: Havn't seen you around for a long time. I'm seahag's =
brother in-law.

Hi, vrolaw...if you been here can't say as to why you've missed me...I =
been here....

--=20
katysails
s/v Chanteuse
Kirie Elite 32
http://katysails.tripod.com

"Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax
and get used to the idea." - Robert A. Heinlein


DSK November 21st 03 11:44 AM

Importing
 
katysails wrote:

If all the money (not material objects) was pooled and then divided by the world's population, what would the distribution look like? If everything was equalized how much would each individual own?


For the whole world, I doubt there are figures anywhere aproaching reasonable accuracy... might as well take a blind guess. For just the US it's not that hard to figure..

291,100,000 people...
$8,275,000,000 money supply (M3 for those into such technicalities)

for each person in the US... $28.43
Annual income, if divided evenly across the US population, would be $34K per year.

Disappointing to all the neo-Bolsheviks among us, but there it is.

DSK



Martin Baxter November 21st 03 12:15 PM

Importing
 
Bob wrote:

Hi katysails: Havn't seen you around for a long time. I'm seahag's brother in-law.


You have our condolences.

Cheers
Marty (ducking)

Martin Baxter November 21st 03 12:18 PM

Importing
 
DSK wrote:


for each person in the US... $28.43
Annual income, if divided evenly across the US population, would be $34K per year.

Disappointing to all the neo-Bolsheviks among us, but there it is.

DSK


Oh I'm not so sure, take a two parent two child household, most would
be happy with an income of $136K per annum.

Cheers
Marty

DSK November 21st 03 04:10 PM

Importing
 
Disappointing to all the neo-Bolsheviks among us, but there it is.

Martin Baxter wrote:
Oh I'm not so sure, take a two parent two child household, most would
be happy with an income of $136K per annum.


Yes, but they could only achieve this by either putting the kids to work, or else by
exploiting the workers and stealing bread from the mouth of the laboring proletariat.

Actually, I'm told by some of our neo-yuppie friends that an income of $100K is "not
sufficient to live comfortably." I took this to mean that they are struggling with
payments on their McMansions and their SUVs, and can't afford to update their home
entertainment systems to the latest technology.

My own theory is that you could gather the wisest men of every country to figure out how
to most fairly divide up all the wealth of the world among mankind, and in three years
you'd be pretty much right back where you started.

Some people shouldn't be allowed to have children, some people shouldn't be allowed to
have guns, and some people act like they're not allowed to have money.

One would think that after 3500 years of civilization, people would have a better grasp
of things like the wheel, domestication of animals, and monetary exchange, but no...
they don't...

Regards- Doug King




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