Against Jobs

Who is against jobs in the United States? The big banks, Wall Street, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Business Roundtable, the United States Chamber of Commerce, the National Retail Federation, Corporate America, the President of the United States, Congress of the United States. Everyone is crying for jobs, but no one seems to understand why there aren’t any.

Beginning in 1973, big banks made most of their profit outside of the United States. Industries off-shored and invested, banks financed the investments and transfered fees, and the fees and interest on the loans made for bigger profits. Long since, the big banks under the leadership of David Rockefeller have led the way to off-shore and make bigger profits. Goldman Sachs, AIG, Citicorp and Wall Street, conspiring for a bailout and now using it for bonuses, make more money from the off-shored operations.

The Council on Foreign Relations ought to be renamed the Council on Making Money. A recent PEW poll reported fully 85 percent of Americans said that protecting U.S. jobs should be a top foreign policy priority. But only 21 percent of the Council on Foreign Relations agrees. Financial interests organized the Business Roundtable to continue off-shore investment and profit. The local Chamber is for Main Street America, but Tom Donahue and the United States Chamber have sold out to the financial interests and oppose jobs and producing in the United States. Thirty years ago, hundreds of thousands of Arrow shirts produced in China were a best seller in the United States. But at Christmastime, the Chinese supply ran short and the retail stores had to order the same shirt from New Jersey. They made 20 percent less profit on the New Jersey shirt. Retailers are all for profit from imports and against domestic production and jobs in America.

Corporate America would fight any initiative by the president, the Congress, or the government to create jobs in the United States. That is, production that faces competition offshore. In globalization, U. S. production can’t make a profit, can’t survive. Its competition will off-shore the same article for a lesser price, putting you out of business. Moreover, Corporate America doesn’t have to bother with labor in China. The Chinese government controls labor and doesn't worry about a work stoppage or minimum wage. All they have is a maximum wage. And Corporate America doesn’t have to worry about clean air, clean water or the environment in China. Nor does it have to worry with OSHA and all of its safety rules. Many times the factory building is furnished and you don’t have to worry about capital costs. If you make a profit, you can just reinvest it in an additional operation and not have to pay any U. S. income tax. If the operation fails, walk away with no legacy costs. Corporate America bitterly opposes its government protecting and strengthening the U. S. economy because producing again in America will put the executives back to work. They can send a Jaycee to China to watch the quality control daily and sit on the 32nd floor on Sixth Avenue with the internet to keep check, and they can leave early for a massage and drinks. With production in China they don’t have to work.

As Commander-in-Chief, the president dithered for months over the number of troops. But he can’t equip the troops except for the favor of a foreign country. The War Production Act of 1950 requires the president to make sure that we can produce in-country those articles necessary for our national defense. Enforcing this law would limit the campaign contributions. Under Section 201 of the trade laws, the president is supposed to take action, like impose tariffs or quotas, when a certain production is endangered. Not only endangered, our automobile production has been bankrupted. But all the president does is give Detroit bailout welfare. The president doesn’t want to limit the campaign contributions.

The same with Congress. Senator Byron Dorgan of North Dakota long ago tried to allocate the tax incentive for foreign jobs and production to domestic jobs and production. The Business Roundtable and the U. S. Chamber fought it like a tiger and killed it.

As the president said in his West Point talk, there is fierce competition in international trade and globalization. All countries move to protect and build their economies while the United States goes out of business. The one advantage that the U.S. has is its richest market in the world. It is fast becoming the poorest market and the U.S. is losing any clout to maintain a strong economy.

The economy is in the hands of Summers, Bernanke and Geithner. Campaign contributions are in the hands of David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel. The poor president is smart, diligent and working his head off campaigning. But he is inexperienced and not governing, and Congress is in a Mexican standoff over an archaic filibuster rule that reveres democracy by the minority.

Of course, the media, which knows this and keeps it top secret, is owned by big business.

If I don’t meet you in the breadline, my children will.

I suggest the interests listed(corporate,etc) know exactly why there are no jobs. they exported the in previous years.
Do any of them want to pass laws against that process?
Unemployment is a given for some time. So say so!

 

Ever since I started my manufacturing business I have felt that the government has been doing all it can to put me out of business. I had some hope for a change with Obama but I quickly realized he was a fraud by the appointments he made before he was inaugerated. My business never took any money from banks and is now very profitable and competitive in the global economy. How? By being ultra lean and having to work 12 hrs per day 6 days per week with at most one week of vacation. Even the Asians I export to in Singapore, Malaysia, and Chinca wonder if I ever sleep.

How stupid was I to go through one of the best engineering schools to suffer like this? I should have just become another worthless police officer with a generous pension, 6 weeks vacation, and an exhorbitant salary:

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2009/12/police-officer-respon...

Now I'm the small business owner who just gets taxed for the lavish lifestyle of these heros.

All I can say is that there is going to be hell to pay one day in the not too distant future for all this. I await that day with eager anticipation.

 

so true

 

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This Work, Against Jobs, by Ernest F. Hollings is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike license.

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