Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#15
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Steve" wrote in message
... On 12-Jan-2010, "nom=de=plume" wrote: So you enjoy the demise and current status. That's your option. I moved my production to to Southeast Asia. "Americans" don't care where products come from, don't mind the high prices, and are satisfied by scraps from their rulers. I respect your choice. I just cannot condone the conditions myself. Enjoy the demise??? Demise of what? The demise? Is the sky falling yet? The only way you would have not witnessed the demise would be if you are extremely young. Perhaps you don't recall the era of a well-to-do middle class and thriving core industries. Come on... the US economy is fine. It's got problems, but it's not going to collapse, except in a conspiracy fantasy. You skedaddled because you're a patriot? Americans do care when presented with facts not fear. I moved operations for 2 reasons - 1) the customers were no longer in North America, and 2) the countries the production moved to do not permit machinery and technology from the U.S. Japan is by far the worst offender, Korea 10% less prohibitive, red China will import from the U.S. if first sent to Korea in pieces, assembled, then sold into red China. 3 months later your systems will be cloned and you're still out in the dark. Why would any company remain in the U.S. when trade policies provide for such absurdities. The company needs to get out. Americans do NOT care where their junk comes from. It can't be from lack of information, which only leaves stupidity and/or sloth. Feel free not to come back or to sell to Americans. Obviously, we're stupid. The typical "American" reaction is "the companies are mismanaged, can't compete..." That points toward stupidity. Administrations put policies in effect that allow any country's firms to dump into the U.S., and at the same time, Japan, Korea and China tell the U.S. producers to F.O. The market is gone, and inferior products are sent to the U.S. which costs 80% less to produce, but sell for 15% less than when produced in the U.S. Again, it has to be the stupidity of "Americans." Some companies are mis-managed. Others are not and do fine. Sounds like you don't understand the basics of international trade agreements. They're not perfect, but they mostly work. My choice is to remain and fight for right. I don't respect a choice that involves quiting. "Quitting" the economic battle in the U.S. now is the same quitting screwing the wife that divorced you 20 years ago. ?? Quiting is being unwilling to stand up for chance. The only industries left in the U.S. are those that are still protected by intellectual property (and not yet cloned by China) dying, or where freight cost considerations make shipping from overseas impractical. GM, Ford and Chrysler will also be moving offshore, performing all fixed costs overseas, export, and operating final assembly plants in the U.S. This mode works for Toyota, Honda, and at the highest degree, Hyundai/Kia. All are well below 50% U.S. content (Toyota, Honda up to about 35-40% depending on model) Hyundai is around 10%. "Americans" don't care. They are so dumbed-down they think "it's all George Bush's fault" and squeal for handouts from money the U.S. government borrows from the producer countries. That's not complicated. For the car industry perhaps. Perhaps not. There are plenty of small car companies that are going for it. "...but...but...but....it's made in Alabama." Hahhahahahahha. ...........sure. Yep, it's stupidity. The U.S. is now a merchant economy, like Peru, Syria, Cambodia, Philippines, etc. - poor people selling essentials and trinkets to each other while earning minimum wages. OH! Almot forgot the growth industries...government "employment" and money laundering. Like I said, feel free not to come back. -- Nom=de=Plume |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
look at this site | Cruising | |||
New web site | Electronics | |||
Looking for a web site | Boat Building | |||
new site | ASA | |||
new site | Crew |