Is America still a serious nation?

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Suzuki Johnny
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Is America still a serious nation?

Post by Suzuki Johnny »

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-09-3 ... ous-nation

Submitted by Patrick Buchanan via Buchanan.org,
Is America still a serious nation?

Consider. While U.S. elites were denouncing Donald Trump as unfit to serve for having compared Miss Universe 1996 to “Miss Piggy” of “The Muppets,” the World Trade Organization was validating the principal plank of his platform.
America’s allies are cheating and robbing her blind on trade.
According to the WTO, Britain, France, Spain, Germany and the EU pumped $22 billion in illegal subsidies into Airbus to swindle Boeing out of the sale of 375 commercial jets.
Subsidies to the A320 caused lost sales of 271 Boeing 737s, writes journalist Alan Boyle. Subsidies for planes in the twin-aisle market cost the sale of 50 Boeing 767s, 777s and 787s. And subsidies to the A380 cost Boeing the sale of 54 747s. These represent crippling losses for Boeing, a crown jewel of U.S. manufacturing and a critical component of our national defense.
Earlier, writes Boyle, the WTO ruled that, “without the subsidies, Airbus would not have existed … and there would be no Airbus aircraft on the market.”
In “The Great Betrayal” in 1998, I noted that in its first 25 years the socialist cartel called Airbus Industrie “sold 770 planes to 102 airlines but did not make a penny of profit.”
Richard Evans of British Aerospace explained: “Airbus is going to attack the Americans, including Boeing, until they bleed and scream.” And another executive said, “If Airbus has to give away planes, we will do it.”
When Europe’s taxpayers objected to the $26 billion in subsidies Airbus had gotten by 1990, German aerospace coordinator Erich Riedl was dismissive, “We don’t care about criticism from small-minded pencil-pushers.”
This is the voice of economic nationalism. Where is ours?
After this latest WTO ruling validating Boeing’s claims against Airbus, the Financial Times is babbling of the need for “free and fair” trade, warning against a trade war.
But is “trade war” not a fair description of what our NATO allies have been doing to us by subsidizing the cartel that helped bring down Lockheed and McDonnell-Douglas and now seeks to bring down Boeing?
Our companies built the planes that saved Europe in World War II and sheltered her in the Cold War. And Europe has been trying to kill those American companies.
Yet even as Europeans collude and cheat to capture America’s markets in passenger jets, Boeing itself, wrote Eamonn Fingleton in 2014, has been “consciously cooperating in its own demise.”
By Boeing’s own figures, writes Fingleton, in the building of its 787 Dreamliner, the world’s most advanced commercial jet, the “Japanese account for a stunning 35 percent of the 787’s overall manufacture, and that may be an underestimate.”
“Much of the rest of the plane is also made abroad … in Italy, Germany, South Korea, France, and the United Kingdom.”
The Dreamliner “flies on Mitsubishi wings. These are no ordinary wings: they constitute the first extensive use of carbon fiber in the wings of a full-size passenger plane. In the view of many experts, by outsourcing the wings Boeing has crossed a red line.”
Mitsubishi, recall, built the Zero, the premier fighter plane in the Pacific in the early years of World War II.
In a related matter, the U.S. merchandise trade deficit in July and August approached $60 billion each month, heading for a trade deficit in goods in 2016 of another $700 billion.
For an advanced economy like the United States, such deficits are milestones of national decline. We have been running them now for 40 years. But in the era of U.S. economic supremacy from 1870 to 1970, we always ran an annual trade surplus, selling far more abroad than Americans bought from abroad.
In the U.S. trade picture, even in the darkest of times, the brightest of categories has been commercial aircraft.
But to watch how we allow NATO allies we defend and protect getting away with decades of colluding and cheating, and then to watch Boeing transfer technology and outsource critical manufacturing to rivals like Japan, one must conclude that not only is the industrial decline of the United States inevitable, but America’s elites do not care.
As for our corporate chieftains, they seem accepting of what is coming when they are gone, so long as the salary increases, stock prices and options, severance packages, and profits remain high.

By increasingly relying upon foreign nations for our national needs, and by outsourcing production, we are outsourcing America’s future.
After Munich in 1938, Neville Chamberlain and Lord Halifax visited Italy to wean Mussolini away from Hitler. The Italian dictator observed his guests closely and remarked to his foreign minister:
“These men are not made of the same stuff as the Francis Drakes and the other magnificent adventurers who created the empire. These, after all, are the tired sons of a long line of rich men, and they will lose their empire.”

If the present regime is not replaced, something like that will be said of this generation of Americans.
duc, sequere, aut de via decede
"frapper fort, frapper vite, frappée souvent-- Adm William "Bull" Halsey
“We’re not going to just shoot the sons-of-bitches, we’re going to rip out their living Goddamned guts and use them to grease the treads of our tanks.”--Gen George Patton
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Re: Is America still a serious nation?

Post by BlacktopTravelr »

To me this is nothing we haven't heard before but using a different subject, an airplane. Our economy is about to go bust and not a lot of people are worried about it. What good will it be to be rich when a dollar is worth a penny or less? This happened to Germany after WWII and it will happen again as long as we allow countries to use fiat money. Money based on a promise is worthless and we have a Reserve Bank printing money out of thin air and selling that money to the U.S. government. That should be called counterfeiting. Where are the people calling for a stop to this :bs: If I was to print money and try to sell it to the government you can bet your sweet ass I would end up in jail for doing what the Fed Reserve is doing. America will fall and with it the fortunes of a lot of people. The poor farmer that has learned to live with less will be the one to come out of this smelling like a rose since he can take care of himself and his family. Those depending on the government will be the ones hardest hit by this downfall. :blink:
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Re: Is America still a serious nation?

Post by jonnycando »

I figure I am good for another 20 years or so before I shuffle off this mortal coil....and I am not thinking I want to lengthen that time.

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Re: Is America still a serious nation?

Post by HARRIS »

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Re: Is America still a serious nation?

Post by Herb »

I can't blame companies for moving production out of this country.

Look at the problems Boeing had when they wanted to move production to a lower cost area in the USA.

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/char ... id=3461150

"The board's complaint is a strong one: It aims to yank Boeing out of South Carolina and drag the aerospace giant back to Washington so a unionized workforce can assemble the jetliner there. At the time the suit was filed, Boeing Executive Vice President J. Michael Luttig called it "frivolous.""

"In 2009, the S.C. General Assembly lured Boeing to North Charleston with a packet of incentives. But officials with the air giant later said problems the company had encountered with strikes by union workers — four over a 22-year period — led it to move to South Carolina, a right-to-work state with one of the lowest unionized workforces in the nation."

The government's kowtowing to the unions is killing business competitiveness in this country and on the world market.

When a company is trying to compete on the world market, cost of production is a huge issue.

While many point fingers at the other countries, the real problem is right here in the USA. The government has made it so difficult and costly to do business here that companies have no choice but to move out.

As much as I like the things Trump says, even Trump is partly wrong about what has caused the problem. He focuses on the trade deals, but, a majority of the problem is the alphabet agencies over reach of control over business. The first thing we need to do is LIMIT the alphabet agencies power over business.
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Re: Is America still a serious nation?

Post by Herb »

I just ran across this. It points out what I have been saying. Government interference is destroying american businesses.

http://constitution.com/university-blam ... ork-hours/

"With just 50 employees, providing healthcare cost for those employees will cost an employer from $100,000 to over $250,000 per year. If the employer is operating on the typical narrow profit margin, spending or saving a quarter of a million dollars or more could make the difference of whether or not the employer remains in business or is forced to lay-off employees or close their doors altogether.

It only makes good business sense to cut employee hours to avoid having to pay the ever increasing cost of employee healthcare. It’s cheaper to have 4 employees, each working 29 hours a week than it is to have 3 employees working 30 hours a week and having to provide them with benefits.

Numerous businesses have taken this cost saving measure even though the Obama administration claims there is no evidence that it’s really happening.

Now the University of Wisconsin-Madison has announced that they are limiting the number of hours students can work to 29 hours a week or less. The university lists only ONE reason for the new policy and that is Obamacare and employer mandate."
I can't seem to win the lottery. I think I have used up all of my good luck riding motorcycles.

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