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![]() "Peter Wiley" wrote in message . .. In article , Capt. JG wrote: If taxes and regulation are reduced, the US becomes more competitive in the world marketplace for labor and products. We're already competitive. Oh yes? You're not competitive on production of foodstuffs or you wouldn't have tariffs & quotas to keep foreign producion out. The US is not competitive in anything but military hardware and very high-tech goods and services these days. And that competitive edge is slipping daily. On the low-tech end, we lost our competitiveness decades ago. Much as I'd wish it to be otherwise, that's the fact, Jack. You're not competitive on production of energy or you wouldn't be importing oil & gas. We could be competitive if we'd utilize nuke and alternative, renewable energy sources properly. But nuke plants are considered taboo, and alternative energy sources, such as wind and hydroelectric power, have been decried by environmental extremists to the point of extinction. Only solar energy is acceptable these days, but there has been little or no exploitation of that unending resource. Proponents of ethanol as an alternative to gasoline are making headway, but very slowly. We also have a decent, if exhaustible, supply of crude, but once again the environmental extremists have corked that possibility. Coal is virtually a non-issue, being replaced by cleaner energy sources whenever possible. And our coal reserves are dwindling, not to mention the hazards of mining the stuff. You're not competitive on most manufactured goods or you'd be exporting them, not importing them from China, Korea, Japan, Mexico etc etc. Yup. Not for a very long time. You're not competitive in space because you've let a sclerotic organisation **** away resources & money. Hogwash. No one is more competitive than the US in space. No one offers the same level of reliability or dependability as the US. Cheaper alternatives have cropped up around the globe, but most companies wishing to launch satellites would utilize the US space program over any other, when it's up and running. It isn't a perfect program, and I wish it would be run more efficiently and effectively, but it's still the best there is. Are you aware of the sheer number of launch failures outside the US? Look it up--it's staggering. You're marginal at best in pharmaceuticals; ditto with biotechnology. Once again we've lost the edge in an area where we should be without peer, thanks mostly to avarice and a stubbornly sluggish government approval process. But this is nothing new--it's been this way for a long time. What's sad is that at least half the world's development of new pharmaceuticals occurs here, but many fail to reach production, thanks to the reasons in the first sentence of this paragraph. So - tell me just what *are* you competitive in? Other than production of sophisticated armaments, which work wonderfully well for winning conventional wars, but are useless against popular insurrection? That pretty well sums it up. I'd add civilian aircraft and other high-tech goods to that mix. Gulfstream 5 production is running about 4 years behind demand. There is no better corporate aircraft being built today, and the buyers know it. And Boeing 757/767/777 aircraft are still very desirable throughout the world, although the competition from such outfits as Airbus is brutal. As for armaments useful against popular insurrection, no one else is doing much better. The US has a new form of gun, the details of which escape me at the moment, but it should revolutionize the ability of the individual soldier to carry huge amounts of firepower without being weighed down to the point of immobility. Max |
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