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Republicans and Free Trade
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Forum:
Politics
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Thread ID:
00630739
Message ID:
00631792
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52
Jerry;

A few more "notes" about free trade. Yes we have regulations that attempt to protect the American worker. Many chemicals and substances used in manufacturing are harmful so to protect the American worker big business with the help of the government is looking out for us.

To be competitive big business moves to a place like Mexico, and pays the worker $5.35 a day, to do the same work someone here was paid $200 a day. Now the good news is that the American worker no longer has to worry about all those nasty chemicals and other life threatening events that sometimes accompany manufacturing. The Mexican worker now has to enjoy all the benefits that manufacturing has to offer. This includes no safety or OSHA requirements. When a Mexican worker gets too sick to work due to chemical poisoning they hire a new worker.

The American worker is thus spared any ill effects that chemicals may have. The American has no job, and the Mexican is dead or going to soon die from lethal chemicals. Owners and investors along with politicians pocket the money and think up new and better ways to make a buck at the workers and societies expense. That is what free trade and capitalism are all about.

God save the Queen or something like that.

Tom


>>>I don't want to debate this, but what exactly is the problem? It affects more than Pennsylvania (although it may impact there more than any where else). The US steel makers having been trying to get this tariff for many years.
>>
>>My problem with this is on a couple of different levels. First, Bush's campaign promises of free trade. Second, tarrifs ultimtely hurt the consumer. I am not an economist, but from what I read, tarrifs are bad economic idea. The decision by Bush was based on politics, not economics.
>
>
>Your logic has some conflicts with reality.
>
>First, 'free trade' will mean that sooner or later your job will get shipped over seas, and the products you used to make will be made cheaper than you could make them. How good can this be for you, the 'consumer', who can no longer afford to buy what he used to make because he no longer has a job? Secondly, 'free trade' doesn't mean equal working conditions. Employers here in the USA have to conform to an almost uncountable list of OSHA restrictions, environmental restrictions, race & gender & disability and age rules-requirements-restrictions and other rules, which rasies the cost of the product. Less than a dozen miles south of the Rio Grande, or in the Phillipines and other 3rd world places such restrictions do not apply. There is no way the American worker can compete with such inequalities in working conditions. Here in Lincoln we have lost 3 big businesses and over 1,000 jobs -- all moving to Mexico. Our taxes are down over 200 Million. There is roughly a 1 to 7
>roll over. Every job lost effects 7 other works in related industries.
>
>While this version of 'free trade' is a great income bonanza for top level management and the stockholders, it is a disaster for those who are stakeholders. They get all the profits, we pay all the costs.
>
>jlk
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