Swordsmyth
Member
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2016
- Messages
- 74,737
Not again, this is one of things he has been established to be wrong on long ago.Let me guess: "Ron is Wrong", again?
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Not again, this is one of things he has been established to be wrong on long ago.Let me guess: "Ron is Wrong", again?
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"You're either with me or you're a Bush-era neoconservative" is a new one.Are you a Bush-era neoconservative?
"You're either with me or you're a Bush-era neoconservative" is a new one.
Let me guess, Pat Buchanan, Sam Francis and Paul Gottfried are also neoncons.
An excellent video for anyone who's actually willing to invest the time.
- CCTelander
- Replies: 29
- Forum: U.S. Political News
Out of a million possible variables you pick free trade and free markets as the reason for a lower standard of living?Cool. Ron Paul is an American hero, but heroes aren't perfect.
If you're a Millennial or Zoomer living in the rural rust belt, then you've seen first hand how free trade and unfettered free markets have hallowed out your lives and culture.
Not again, this is one of things he has been established to be wrong on long ago.
Sure, they all contribute in their own way, but these factors you highlighted existed prior to deindustrialization. Free trade created the wound, unfettered capitalism dug the knife in and the domestic policies you mentioned just added salt.What about government spending? Confiscatory taxation? Massive regulations? Inflation of the money supply? Artificially low interest rates?
I've come full circle, after over 35 years now, back to a Pat Buchanan "America First" nativist, nationalist, populist.I'll tell you who was right in the 80's and 90's...
Pat Buchanan and Ross Perot.
I agree. I have also been opposed to this position of libertarian thought.I'm actually going to give you credit for this response. Usually if someone disagrees with Ron Paul's stance they try to claim Ron Paul really meant the opposite of what he wrote.
I've got to clarify here, what do you mean by "industrial base". I include in "industrial base" all the things that economists track for it: not merely the manufacturing predicated on the bending and assembly of metal. AF earlier quoted someone from CATO saying:The 2nd one. "Maintaining the US industrial base".
The American economy is stagnating/dying because it is no longer capable of producing wealth. A country that cannot produce wealth is neither sovereign nor sustainable.
Our economy is in death throes, and what little economy that sustains us is built entirely off debt.
If this is what the "free market" looks like, then I don't want it.
While I disagree with that statement as written, there is an element of truth behind it that I would agree with. And that is that a focus on domestic manufacturing is a rationale for maintaining the livelihoods of blue collar workers with low education. Yes, there's a reason to maintain a manufacturing base, but it's not to maintain the livelihoods of blue collar workers with low education. Pragmatically, it's to maintain the infrastructure necessary to defend and sustain the country in time of military invasion by a foreign entity. And in that respect, the US has greater production capabilities than the next eight countries combined - six of which are allies (at least before Trump engaged in this trade war). And in that area also, the US exports more than the next nine countries combined.He says a focus on domestic manufacturing is simply a fetish for keeping white males with low education in the powerful positions they are in"
Instead, it has to do with testing of interim and finished product, as well as diagnosing and resolving problems.Not now John I've got to get on with this
I don’t know what it is, but it fits on here like this
Is "this" a pronoun for Trump? Gotta ask, because I'm not very good with these new age pronouns that you Texans are famous for. ... Sorry, I try, but I'll never reach the professional levels of facetiousness that has come to be defined as a synonym for TheTexan.
"The solution" requires a problem to be defined, and I just couldn't tell what the problem you perceived was from what you wrote. It's a thread on Ron Paul's case for "Free Markets". Maybe you're defining "Free Markets" as the problem. I just couldn't tell from your inquiry. Going back through all these tariff threads, I see a number of things that posters seem to classify as problems:
- Inequitable trade between countries (can you believe that conservatives are describing "lack of equity" as a problem?)
- Maintaining the US industrial base
- Maintaining the income level of blue collar workers in the US.
- The perception, by consumers, that products made in the US aren't worth what's being charged for them
- Competing against "slave labor"
I suppose there's others. What do you define the problem as?
We also learned that during the pandemic part of the reason why we had major economic problems were that we ran out of essential things like medicines and microchips because China and Taiwan stopped sending them.
Without microchips we had to stop the assembly of essential things like modern cars and redirected all of our chips for defense systems.
So it's insane not to change the balance of trade. Either to a system where the other countries buy more stuff from us because they lowered trade barriers or a system where we can defend our people from a war if we have to because we have the manufacturing capability.
No I'm talking about when China threatened to stop sending antibiotics and did so the state government decided that you driving to work isn't safe because if you get in an accident and have a gut wound you will die of sepsis or if your leg is damaged you will have to have it amputatedJust think, if Trump didn't initiate Operation Warp Speed, invoke travel and other bans, and didn't sign the "Cares Act" after threatening Tom Massie, how many trillions and trillions we would have saved, and we wouldn't be where we are today, in order for Trump to create/invoke even more havoc in the world today.
And you still don't see that he is working for the corporate-conglomerate-globalists.
What dates are you referring to when you say that "free trade created the wound" and "capitalism dug the knife in"?Sure, they all contribute in their own way, but these factors you highlighted existed prior to deindustrialization. Free trade created the wound, unfettered capitalism dug the knife in and the domestic policies you mentioned just added salt.
I've got to clarify here, what do you mean by "industrial base". I include in "industrial base" all the things that economists track for it: not merely the manufacturing predicated on the bending and assembly of metal. AF earlier quoted someone from CATO saying:
While I disagree with that statement as written, there is an element of truth behind it that I would agree with. And that is that a focus on domestic manufacturing is a rationale for maintaining the livelihoods of blue collar workers with low education. Yes, there's a reason to maintain a manufacturing base, but it's not to maintain the livelihoods of blue collar workers with low education.
Pragmatically, it's to maintain the infrastructure necessary to defend and sustain the country in time of military invasion by a foreign entity.
And in that respect, the US has greater production capabilities than the next eight countries combined - six of which are allies (at least before Trump engaged in this trade war).
Like I said above, when I talk about the industrial base, I include all the things that economists track for it: things like Technology and Innovation, Aerospace and Defense, Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology, Mining and Minerals, Energy Production, Entertainment and Media, Agriculture and Food Production, as well as Finance and Banking. From that vantage, the US is not stagnating industrially. The US has the 7th highest GDP per capital on the planet, outpaced by countries that have greater footprints with things like Finance and Banking.
As I stated earlier, that's not the problem. The problem is that individuals within that collective of "your fellow US citizens" are buying those dumped products because you've failed to convince them that doing so is "bad". You haven't made your case with them. Instead you're getting your government to coerce your fellow citizens by hitting them over the head (with tariffs) until they come to their senses and recognize that those in positions of power know what's better for them than they do. The very definition of elitism.The problem is that other countries dump their products ...
Wrong, everyone knows it's bad. Everyone wants to buy locally because it's common sense that way the wealth stays here in our communities instead of going overseas and not coming back.The problem is that individuals within that collective of "your fellow US citizens" are buying those dumped products because you've failed to convince them that doing so is "bad".
That illustrates the fallacy of intellectual property (IP), doesn't it - you can only enforce US IP laws within the boundaries of the US. In reality, IP ceases to be your property as soon as you allow it leave your skull. A patent or copyright is government granting you a exclusive license to profit from your intellectual creation for a limited amount of time. If it was really your "property" it would be yours until you relinquished it.The problem is that other countries ...steal our intellectual property
That illustrates the fallacy of intellectual property (IP), doesn't it - you can only enforce US IP laws within the boundaries of the US. In reality, IP ceases to be your property as soon as you allow it leave your skull. A patent or copyright is government granting you a exclusive license to profit from your intellectual creation for a limited amount of time. If it was really your "property" it would be yours until you relinquished it.
But pragmatically, that situation's not going to change; governments are going to use their oppressive powers to enforce those IP edicts (at least on their own citizenry). However they can only do so within the boundaries of their own borders - and perhaps by treaty with other countries. Putting general tariffs on all the products a country exports to the US doesn't address the real problem there - it doesn't distinguish the products with "stolen" IP from those without it. What's more, the funds collected from the tariffs goes into the coffers of US government rather than the holder of the patent/copyright. There's a case to be made that a product containing IP (protected by the US government) ought to be assessed a licensing fee (one which is paid to the holder of the IP grant) before it can be sold within the US. What that doesn't solve (and neither do Tariffs BTW) is that the products containing US IP can be sold to other non-US countries without the licensing fee being paid to the holder of the IP grant - that's something you need a treaty with those countries to resolve. Tariffs don't solve that "problem"