And that very small group is now trumps cabinet, circle of life.
And that's why Trump wants to end these trade agreements? Have you even thought about this? Or is this reactionary?
Hilarious!
And that very small group is now trumps cabinet, circle of life.
The left used to be against this. It has decimated our manufacturing base, which was predicted, all to make a few rich men even richer. But of course the leftists here are for it now.
No it hasn't, manufacturing in the U.S. is at an all-time high. Manufacturing employment is not (but it is up over a million (8%) on Obama's watch as compared to down six million (33%) on Dubya's watch) but that's due to increases in manufacturing efficiency.
And increased automation. I visited a German foundry and electronic assembly with 30+ years apart, once as a youth, last year as a visitor. The difference was so jarring I felt like I was really becoming old. Today there was in the plant only very few people , mostly looking over the facility, quite a few engineer and machinist, only 4 or so blue collars, with the most people at shipping and receiving. It was like seeing a phantom ghost series of plant all empty or nearly.
Greg Hayes said:Well, and again, if you think about what we talked about last week we’re going to make up $16 million investment in that factory in Indianapolis to automate to drive the cost down so that we can continue to be competitive. Now is it as cheap as moving to Mexico with lower cost labour? No. But we will make that plant competitive just because we’ll make the capital investments there. But what that ultimately means is there will be fewer jobs.
It turns out I was wrong. Terminating a treaty is a Legislative action not an Executive action.
The case was ruled on by the US District Court of DC reversed on appeal by the appeals court and the Supreme Court vacated the appeals court decision making the District Court ruling the law of the land.
Whether President Carter could unilaterally break a defense treaty with the Republic of China without Senate approval was a political question and could not be reviewed by the court, as Congress had not issued a formal opposition. The case was dismissed.
I don't think that a lot of people realise that automation is at the point where it needs very few people to run very complex processes. Some processes can be done entirely by automation and have just one person controlling it, and they might not even be in the same building, or even the same site.
And yet more jobs exist now then at any other time in history. And while wages have stagnated, innovation has improved the wealth of all of us (the Phone I am on now). What wealth percentile would you need to be in to give up this life for living in 1982 or 94?
The reason automation is implemented is to improve efficiencies; one of the improvements is to lower labor costs. You may install a machine that takes three persons to operate, but you can bet it eliminates jobs somewhere in the operation. There would be no reason to take on the initial expense otherwise.In another thread, ChrisBFRPKY insisted that the result of installing a machine in his place of work was replacing one person who did the job with three people, one to watch the machine, one to maintain the machine and one to program the machine.
Unless that company was uniquely badly run, I think he might be mis-remembering but that may be people's default view of automation which is why they don't appreciate that even if the manufacturing work "comes back" (even though those things weren't being manufactured 4 years ago - but that's a different issue) the number of jobs will be comparatively low.
Yea, that was one of the more comical alternative facts we've seen recently. That automation expands the workforce.
Industrial robots are people too.
In another thread, ChrisBFRPKY insisted that the result of installing a machine in his place of work was replacing one person who did the job with three people, one to watch the machine, one to maintain the machine and one to program the machine.
Unless that company was uniquely badly run, I think he might be mis-remembering but that may be people's default view of automation which is why they don't appreciate that even if the manufacturing work "comes back" (even though those things weren't being manufactured 4 years ago - but that's a different issue) the number of jobs will be comparatively low.
The liberal argument? What liberal argument is that?I realize that a stronger US work force may not go well for the UK, but at least the bust of Winston Churchill is back in the Oval Office.
Don't be concerned, Trump will work with the UK on trade deals to reward the Brexit folks. I expect to see more minis on the roads here.
And yes, that was my experience with a robot at SKF-USA. I fully realize automation tends to replace a few workers, yet closing down a factory and moving that factory elsewhere replaces them all. The Liberal argument worked for several years in the US, until we saw what had happened as a result. So, that is no longer the direction we will move. It's not personal, it's just business.
Chris B.
I realize that a stronger US work force may not go well for the UK, but at least the bust of Winston Churchill is back in the Oval Office.![]()
Don't be concerned, Trump will work with the UK on trade deals to reward the Brexit folks. I expect to see more minis on the roads here.
And yes, that was my experience with a robot at SKF-USA. I fully realize automation tends to replace a few workers, yet closing down a factory and moving that factory elsewhere replaces them all. The Liberal argument worked for several years in the US, until we saw what had happened as a result. So, that is no longer the direction we will move. It's not personal, it's just business.
Chris B.
No, it's transformational. The amount of labour required to manufacture things is orders of magnitude lower than 40 years ago.
U.S. manufacturing output is at an all time high.
October there were 144 million non farm employed in the US. In 1994 it was 116 million. We haven't reached the end of jobs yet.
Did Trump just lock in the union vote for 2020?