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May 13, 2009 at 1:56 AM #398455May 13, 2009 at 7:25 AM #397802AnonymousGuest
[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][…] will allow them to shift production capabilities into the Chinese market, where they can produce far more for far less.
[…]
It is also interesting to note that the UAW collective bargaining agreement was left untouched [/quote]I’m confused. Are you upset about exporting jobs or protecting unions?
May 13, 2009 at 7:25 AM #398049AnonymousGuest[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][…] will allow them to shift production capabilities into the Chinese market, where they can produce far more for far less.
[…]
It is also interesting to note that the UAW collective bargaining agreement was left untouched [/quote]I’m confused. Are you upset about exporting jobs or protecting unions?
May 13, 2009 at 7:25 AM #398274AnonymousGuest[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][…] will allow them to shift production capabilities into the Chinese market, where they can produce far more for far less.
[…]
It is also interesting to note that the UAW collective bargaining agreement was left untouched [/quote]I’m confused. Are you upset about exporting jobs or protecting unions?
May 13, 2009 at 7:25 AM #398331AnonymousGuest[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][…] will allow them to shift production capabilities into the Chinese market, where they can produce far more for far less.
[…]
It is also interesting to note that the UAW collective bargaining agreement was left untouched [/quote]I’m confused. Are you upset about exporting jobs or protecting unions?
May 13, 2009 at 7:25 AM #398475AnonymousGuest[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][…] will allow them to shift production capabilities into the Chinese market, where they can produce far more for far less.
[…]
It is also interesting to note that the UAW collective bargaining agreement was left untouched [/quote]I’m confused. Are you upset about exporting jobs or protecting unions?
May 13, 2009 at 9:43 AM #397896Rt.66ParticipantHere’s a good comment posted on Mish’s site:
BB says:Yesterday, 10:24:36 PM“”GM aims to ship about 50,000 automobiles to the U.S. by 2014, the report said.”
Anyone here ever hear the old saying: “As GM goes so goes the _______ ? Hmmmmm….I wonder how that ends?
The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians. Bond holders be damned. Unions at the automakers were paid off with a short term gimme. Legal financial contracts with respect to who’s 1st in line to get paid for a bankruptcy at major corporations just got scrambled. The FED and treasury have gone incestuous without so much as a congressional audit as to what’s on their balance sheets. FDIC? Ha. Quant funds on puppet strings drive markets that obviously have lost any semblance of reflecting business fundamentals tied to supply/demand.
It’s time to test the country’s leather folks. We’re rotten to the core and everyone with half a brain to pay attention knows it. The means of capital production on scales that matter are up for grabs and slipping swiftly into consolidated global power circles. The rule of law is becoming more and more gray day by day. Sound crazy? Ask a GM/Chrysler bond holder what they think. The MSM is bought and paid for to spoon feed the masses. Everyone knows something’s got to give, and that the can can only get kicked down the dirt road for so long before the reality of the mathematics take hold. It’s a long and winding road.
One can only begin to guess what our country, currency, economy, and population will look like in a few short years…
More ▼Like this comment? [yes] [no] (Score: 70 by 74 votes)Community assigned karma score: 0 by 0 reply
————The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians.
I would add “and at the hands of the brainwashed masses”.
May 13, 2009 at 9:43 AM #398144Rt.66ParticipantHere’s a good comment posted on Mish’s site:
BB says:Yesterday, 10:24:36 PM“”GM aims to ship about 50,000 automobiles to the U.S. by 2014, the report said.”
Anyone here ever hear the old saying: “As GM goes so goes the _______ ? Hmmmmm….I wonder how that ends?
The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians. Bond holders be damned. Unions at the automakers were paid off with a short term gimme. Legal financial contracts with respect to who’s 1st in line to get paid for a bankruptcy at major corporations just got scrambled. The FED and treasury have gone incestuous without so much as a congressional audit as to what’s on their balance sheets. FDIC? Ha. Quant funds on puppet strings drive markets that obviously have lost any semblance of reflecting business fundamentals tied to supply/demand.
It’s time to test the country’s leather folks. We’re rotten to the core and everyone with half a brain to pay attention knows it. The means of capital production on scales that matter are up for grabs and slipping swiftly into consolidated global power circles. The rule of law is becoming more and more gray day by day. Sound crazy? Ask a GM/Chrysler bond holder what they think. The MSM is bought and paid for to spoon feed the masses. Everyone knows something’s got to give, and that the can can only get kicked down the dirt road for so long before the reality of the mathematics take hold. It’s a long and winding road.
One can only begin to guess what our country, currency, economy, and population will look like in a few short years…
More ▼Like this comment? [yes] [no] (Score: 70 by 74 votes)Community assigned karma score: 0 by 0 reply
————The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians.
I would add “and at the hands of the brainwashed masses”.
May 13, 2009 at 9:43 AM #398369Rt.66ParticipantHere’s a good comment posted on Mish’s site:
BB says:Yesterday, 10:24:36 PM“”GM aims to ship about 50,000 automobiles to the U.S. by 2014, the report said.”
Anyone here ever hear the old saying: “As GM goes so goes the _______ ? Hmmmmm….I wonder how that ends?
The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians. Bond holders be damned. Unions at the automakers were paid off with a short term gimme. Legal financial contracts with respect to who’s 1st in line to get paid for a bankruptcy at major corporations just got scrambled. The FED and treasury have gone incestuous without so much as a congressional audit as to what’s on their balance sheets. FDIC? Ha. Quant funds on puppet strings drive markets that obviously have lost any semblance of reflecting business fundamentals tied to supply/demand.
It’s time to test the country’s leather folks. We’re rotten to the core and everyone with half a brain to pay attention knows it. The means of capital production on scales that matter are up for grabs and slipping swiftly into consolidated global power circles. The rule of law is becoming more and more gray day by day. Sound crazy? Ask a GM/Chrysler bond holder what they think. The MSM is bought and paid for to spoon feed the masses. Everyone knows something’s got to give, and that the can can only get kicked down the dirt road for so long before the reality of the mathematics take hold. It’s a long and winding road.
One can only begin to guess what our country, currency, economy, and population will look like in a few short years…
More ▼Like this comment? [yes] [no] (Score: 70 by 74 votes)Community assigned karma score: 0 by 0 reply
————The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians.
I would add “and at the hands of the brainwashed masses”.
May 13, 2009 at 9:43 AM #398427Rt.66ParticipantHere’s a good comment posted on Mish’s site:
BB says:Yesterday, 10:24:36 PM“”GM aims to ship about 50,000 automobiles to the U.S. by 2014, the report said.”
Anyone here ever hear the old saying: “As GM goes so goes the _______ ? Hmmmmm….I wonder how that ends?
The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians. Bond holders be damned. Unions at the automakers were paid off with a short term gimme. Legal financial contracts with respect to who’s 1st in line to get paid for a bankruptcy at major corporations just got scrambled. The FED and treasury have gone incestuous without so much as a congressional audit as to what’s on their balance sheets. FDIC? Ha. Quant funds on puppet strings drive markets that obviously have lost any semblance of reflecting business fundamentals tied to supply/demand.
It’s time to test the country’s leather folks. We’re rotten to the core and everyone with half a brain to pay attention knows it. The means of capital production on scales that matter are up for grabs and slipping swiftly into consolidated global power circles. The rule of law is becoming more and more gray day by day. Sound crazy? Ask a GM/Chrysler bond holder what they think. The MSM is bought and paid for to spoon feed the masses. Everyone knows something’s got to give, and that the can can only get kicked down the dirt road for so long before the reality of the mathematics take hold. It’s a long and winding road.
One can only begin to guess what our country, currency, economy, and population will look like in a few short years…
More ▼Like this comment? [yes] [no] (Score: 70 by 74 votes)Community assigned karma score: 0 by 0 reply
————The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians.
I would add “and at the hands of the brainwashed masses”.
May 13, 2009 at 9:43 AM #398571Rt.66ParticipantHere’s a good comment posted on Mish’s site:
BB says:Yesterday, 10:24:36 PM“”GM aims to ship about 50,000 automobiles to the U.S. by 2014, the report said.”
Anyone here ever hear the old saying: “As GM goes so goes the _______ ? Hmmmmm….I wonder how that ends?
The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians. Bond holders be damned. Unions at the automakers were paid off with a short term gimme. Legal financial contracts with respect to who’s 1st in line to get paid for a bankruptcy at major corporations just got scrambled. The FED and treasury have gone incestuous without so much as a congressional audit as to what’s on their balance sheets. FDIC? Ha. Quant funds on puppet strings drive markets that obviously have lost any semblance of reflecting business fundamentals tied to supply/demand.
It’s time to test the country’s leather folks. We’re rotten to the core and everyone with half a brain to pay attention knows it. The means of capital production on scales that matter are up for grabs and slipping swiftly into consolidated global power circles. The rule of law is becoming more and more gray day by day. Sound crazy? Ask a GM/Chrysler bond holder what they think. The MSM is bought and paid for to spoon feed the masses. Everyone knows something’s got to give, and that the can can only get kicked down the dirt road for so long before the reality of the mathematics take hold. It’s a long and winding road.
One can only begin to guess what our country, currency, economy, and population will look like in a few short years…
More ▼Like this comment? [yes] [no] (Score: 70 by 74 votes)Community assigned karma score: 0 by 0 reply
————The de-industrialization of America is well underway at the hands of the banksters and politicians.
I would add “and at the hands of the brainwashed masses”.
May 15, 2009 at 11:03 AM #399582Rt.66Participant“Jobs aren’t coming back,” said John E. Silvia, chief economist at Wachovia in Charlotte, N.C. “A lot of production either isn’t going to happen at all, or it’s going to happen somewhere other than the United States. There are going to be fewer stores, fewer factories, fewer financial services operations. Firms are making strategic decisions that they don’t want to be in their businesses.”
“The current pace of decline is breathtaking,” said Robert Barbera, chief economist at the research and trading firm ITG. “We are now falling at a near record rate in the postwar period and there’s been no change in the violent downward trajectory.”
I’ll give it another year before the Benedict Arnolds of US jobs start to think about THEIR jobs going bye-bye. It’s going to be odd to read posts declaring they wish they had supported US jobs BEFORE the lay-offs reached themselves.
One day we will have to riot and protest for jobs, just like they are doing in Europe. But before that can happen sentiment needs to change.
Human nature 🙁
May 15, 2009 at 11:03 AM #399835Rt.66Participant“Jobs aren’t coming back,” said John E. Silvia, chief economist at Wachovia in Charlotte, N.C. “A lot of production either isn’t going to happen at all, or it’s going to happen somewhere other than the United States. There are going to be fewer stores, fewer factories, fewer financial services operations. Firms are making strategic decisions that they don’t want to be in their businesses.”
“The current pace of decline is breathtaking,” said Robert Barbera, chief economist at the research and trading firm ITG. “We are now falling at a near record rate in the postwar period and there’s been no change in the violent downward trajectory.”
I’ll give it another year before the Benedict Arnolds of US jobs start to think about THEIR jobs going bye-bye. It’s going to be odd to read posts declaring they wish they had supported US jobs BEFORE the lay-offs reached themselves.
One day we will have to riot and protest for jobs, just like they are doing in Europe. But before that can happen sentiment needs to change.
Human nature 🙁
May 15, 2009 at 11:03 AM #400064Rt.66Participant“Jobs aren’t coming back,” said John E. Silvia, chief economist at Wachovia in Charlotte, N.C. “A lot of production either isn’t going to happen at all, or it’s going to happen somewhere other than the United States. There are going to be fewer stores, fewer factories, fewer financial services operations. Firms are making strategic decisions that they don’t want to be in their businesses.”
“The current pace of decline is breathtaking,” said Robert Barbera, chief economist at the research and trading firm ITG. “We are now falling at a near record rate in the postwar period and there’s been no change in the violent downward trajectory.”
I’ll give it another year before the Benedict Arnolds of US jobs start to think about THEIR jobs going bye-bye. It’s going to be odd to read posts declaring they wish they had supported US jobs BEFORE the lay-offs reached themselves.
One day we will have to riot and protest for jobs, just like they are doing in Europe. But before that can happen sentiment needs to change.
Human nature 🙁
May 15, 2009 at 11:03 AM #400121Rt.66Participant“Jobs aren’t coming back,” said John E. Silvia, chief economist at Wachovia in Charlotte, N.C. “A lot of production either isn’t going to happen at all, or it’s going to happen somewhere other than the United States. There are going to be fewer stores, fewer factories, fewer financial services operations. Firms are making strategic decisions that they don’t want to be in their businesses.”
“The current pace of decline is breathtaking,” said Robert Barbera, chief economist at the research and trading firm ITG. “We are now falling at a near record rate in the postwar period and there’s been no change in the violent downward trajectory.”
I’ll give it another year before the Benedict Arnolds of US jobs start to think about THEIR jobs going bye-bye. It’s going to be odd to read posts declaring they wish they had supported US jobs BEFORE the lay-offs reached themselves.
One day we will have to riot and protest for jobs, just like they are doing in Europe. But before that can happen sentiment needs to change.
Human nature 🙁
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