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UK space program
Message
De
07/12/2008 12:02:33
 
 
À
05/12/2008 20:11:04
Information générale
Forum:
Space
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01365475
Message ID:
01365848
Vues:
9
>>>>Money spent on space isn't put in a bag and launched on a rocket. Its spent on engineers and equipment. Mostly in the US. Its like a cash injection right where its needed, in employment and training.
>>>
>>>I didn't say it is or would be money wasted. Just that space dreams strike me as a luxury at the moment, not a necessity.
>>
>>Mike,
>>
>>I wouldn't want to explain that position to the 300+ workers who were just given pink slips in CT aerospace industries this week.
>
>While I agree that it is crucial to our economy to maintain as many jobs as possible, between August 1998 and September 2001 the U.S. manufacturing sector lost 1.4 million jobs. By 2000 the loss was 3.0 million. North Carolina alone lost over 130,000 by 2000 and up to now the total has exceeded 300,000. The country was slammed for years as manufacturing moved overseas and no one considered a bailout then. Now, we are worried about 300?
>
>Perhaps our government would be better focusing on current trade deficits:
>
>http://www.epi.org/content.cfm/bp117
>
>North Carolina lost 16,000 manufacturing jobs in 2007 alone:
>
>http://www.manufacturersnews.com/news/release.asp?ID=115
>
>Or how about the 18,000 workers in North Carolina who lost jobs in the IT manufacturing field:
>
>http://www.soc.duke.edu/NC_GlobalEconomy/information/workers.shtml
>
>Also, don't forget that the image of every immigrant coming to this country to work in low-tech menial labor jobs is false:
>
>Most of the attention on North Carolina's emergence as an immigrant-receiving state has focused on low-skilled immigration, primarily from Mexico, to supply the labor needs of traditional industries such as agriculture and hog farming (see the Workers and Jobs section of the Hog Farming industry). What is less known is that North Carolina has also witnessed a concomitant growth in the numbers of immigrants who arrive to work in its high-technology sectors.
>
>According to the 2000 census, India is now the second leading country (behind Mexico) sending immigrants into North Carolina.Highly educated and skilled Indian immigrants have significantly impacted the hi-tech economy of Silicon Valley in California, both as professionals and entrepreneurs, and this has been well documented in the literature. A similar labor flow of skilled workers from India has converged around North Carolina's hi-tech hubs, moving into the Research Triangle Park area and around Charlotte.
>


It is a bit 'luddist' view;
Business is all about performance and profit margins. Low skilled immigrats cure profit margins by having to accept lower wages, while highly skilled immigrants bust performance/productivity (again at lower wages). You can lament all you want about middle-class lost 'safe heavens', but that will not change minds of companies trying simply to surviwe in worsened economic conditions.
As goverment(s) no longer can (or have to) maintain/ponder middleclass little 'dreamworld, you eighter get highly skilled or you accept lower wages.
After going few rounds around the globe, globalisation has hit home.

Perhaps, you will eventually discover 'left' as your last line of defence {g}
*****************
Srdjan Djordjevic
Limassol, Cyprus

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