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March 27, 2010 at 9:19 PM in reply to: What the hell????Throwing money after money after money… #533247
sreeb
Participant[quote=Hobie]For me the stock market is not a good measure for good legislation. After all the insurance companies got everything they wanted and are riding the wave. Soon, this tide will turn and they will be in trouble.
Here is a stock market example: Jack in the Box has grown 20% YTD while Qualcomm, is down about -10%. Doesn’t make sense. Burgers outpaces technology??[/quote]
It makes sense. The high tech business can be exported and must compete globally. The burger business can’t and doesn’t.
sreeb
Participant[quote=Hobie]For me the stock market is not a good measure for good legislation. After all the insurance companies got everything they wanted and are riding the wave. Soon, this tide will turn and they will be in trouble.
Here is a stock market example: Jack in the Box has grown 20% YTD while Qualcomm, is down about -10%. Doesn’t make sense. Burgers outpaces technology??[/quote]
It makes sense. The high tech business can be exported and must compete globally. The burger business can’t and doesn’t.
sreeb
Participant[quote=Hobie]For me the stock market is not a good measure for good legislation. After all the insurance companies got everything they wanted and are riding the wave. Soon, this tide will turn and they will be in trouble.
Here is a stock market example: Jack in the Box has grown 20% YTD while Qualcomm, is down about -10%. Doesn’t make sense. Burgers outpaces technology??[/quote]
It makes sense. The high tech business can be exported and must compete globally. The burger business can’t and doesn’t.
sreeb
Participant[quote=Hobie]For me the stock market is not a good measure for good legislation. After all the insurance companies got everything they wanted and are riding the wave. Soon, this tide will turn and they will be in trouble.
Here is a stock market example: Jack in the Box has grown 20% YTD while Qualcomm, is down about -10%. Doesn’t make sense. Burgers outpaces technology??[/quote]
It makes sense. The high tech business can be exported and must compete globally. The burger business can’t and doesn’t.
sreeb
Participant[quote=Hobie]For me the stock market is not a good measure for good legislation. After all the insurance companies got everything they wanted and are riding the wave. Soon, this tide will turn and they will be in trouble.
Here is a stock market example: Jack in the Box has grown 20% YTD while Qualcomm, is down about -10%. Doesn’t make sense. Burgers outpaces technology??[/quote]
It makes sense. The high tech business can be exported and must compete globally. The burger business can’t and doesn’t.
March 26, 2010 at 7:54 PM in reply to: What the hell????Throwing money after money after money… #531907sreeb
Participant[quote=SK in CV][quote=briansd1]
If we don’t find something else to manufacture that we, or the rest of the world wants, we’re in deep trouble. (Alternative energy and related technologies???)[/quote]I think we have reached a tipping point with manufacturing. In the past, our high salaries, compared to the Chinese, were balanced by our infrastructure, education, available capital, system of allocating capital, and legal system.
Those advantages are now gone.
They have been building infrastructure like mad and ours has been rotting. Our suppliers are leaving so where once it was easier to be here, now it is harder.
They have matched our level of education in a single generation. Not for the entire population but the top 200 million can go head to head with us. I think the one child policy had a big impact here. The Chinese invest in their children and those investments were focused on just one.
Our government is busy borrowing all of our capital and taxing the rest.
Our legal system has become a burden and government unreliable (think Chrysler bond holders).
Our one remaining big advantage is possession of the worlds reserve currency but we seem to be trying to blow that as fast as we can.
Even though we no longer have an added value, our labor is still priced at 20x.
If you were going to build a factory to produce something that can be shipped in a container, why would would you build it here?
Our manufacturing base is disappearing at an incredible rate and the jobs that go are never coming back.
March 26, 2010 at 7:54 PM in reply to: What the hell????Throwing money after money after money… #532035sreeb
Participant[quote=SK in CV][quote=briansd1]
If we don’t find something else to manufacture that we, or the rest of the world wants, we’re in deep trouble. (Alternative energy and related technologies???)[/quote]I think we have reached a tipping point with manufacturing. In the past, our high salaries, compared to the Chinese, were balanced by our infrastructure, education, available capital, system of allocating capital, and legal system.
Those advantages are now gone.
They have been building infrastructure like mad and ours has been rotting. Our suppliers are leaving so where once it was easier to be here, now it is harder.
They have matched our level of education in a single generation. Not for the entire population but the top 200 million can go head to head with us. I think the one child policy had a big impact here. The Chinese invest in their children and those investments were focused on just one.
Our government is busy borrowing all of our capital and taxing the rest.
Our legal system has become a burden and government unreliable (think Chrysler bond holders).
Our one remaining big advantage is possession of the worlds reserve currency but we seem to be trying to blow that as fast as we can.
Even though we no longer have an added value, our labor is still priced at 20x.
If you were going to build a factory to produce something that can be shipped in a container, why would would you build it here?
Our manufacturing base is disappearing at an incredible rate and the jobs that go are never coming back.
March 26, 2010 at 7:54 PM in reply to: What the hell????Throwing money after money after money… #532487sreeb
Participant[quote=SK in CV][quote=briansd1]
If we don’t find something else to manufacture that we, or the rest of the world wants, we’re in deep trouble. (Alternative energy and related technologies???)[/quote]I think we have reached a tipping point with manufacturing. In the past, our high salaries, compared to the Chinese, were balanced by our infrastructure, education, available capital, system of allocating capital, and legal system.
Those advantages are now gone.
They have been building infrastructure like mad and ours has been rotting. Our suppliers are leaving so where once it was easier to be here, now it is harder.
They have matched our level of education in a single generation. Not for the entire population but the top 200 million can go head to head with us. I think the one child policy had a big impact here. The Chinese invest in their children and those investments were focused on just one.
Our government is busy borrowing all of our capital and taxing the rest.
Our legal system has become a burden and government unreliable (think Chrysler bond holders).
Our one remaining big advantage is possession of the worlds reserve currency but we seem to be trying to blow that as fast as we can.
Even though we no longer have an added value, our labor is still priced at 20x.
If you were going to build a factory to produce something that can be shipped in a container, why would would you build it here?
Our manufacturing base is disappearing at an incredible rate and the jobs that go are never coming back.
March 26, 2010 at 7:54 PM in reply to: What the hell????Throwing money after money after money… #532584sreeb
Participant[quote=SK in CV][quote=briansd1]
If we don’t find something else to manufacture that we, or the rest of the world wants, we’re in deep trouble. (Alternative energy and related technologies???)[/quote]I think we have reached a tipping point with manufacturing. In the past, our high salaries, compared to the Chinese, were balanced by our infrastructure, education, available capital, system of allocating capital, and legal system.
Those advantages are now gone.
They have been building infrastructure like mad and ours has been rotting. Our suppliers are leaving so where once it was easier to be here, now it is harder.
They have matched our level of education in a single generation. Not for the entire population but the top 200 million can go head to head with us. I think the one child policy had a big impact here. The Chinese invest in their children and those investments were focused on just one.
Our government is busy borrowing all of our capital and taxing the rest.
Our legal system has become a burden and government unreliable (think Chrysler bond holders).
Our one remaining big advantage is possession of the worlds reserve currency but we seem to be trying to blow that as fast as we can.
Even though we no longer have an added value, our labor is still priced at 20x.
If you were going to build a factory to produce something that can be shipped in a container, why would would you build it here?
Our manufacturing base is disappearing at an incredible rate and the jobs that go are never coming back.
March 26, 2010 at 7:54 PM in reply to: What the hell????Throwing money after money after money… #532845sreeb
Participant[quote=SK in CV][quote=briansd1]
If we don’t find something else to manufacture that we, or the rest of the world wants, we’re in deep trouble. (Alternative energy and related technologies???)[/quote]I think we have reached a tipping point with manufacturing. In the past, our high salaries, compared to the Chinese, were balanced by our infrastructure, education, available capital, system of allocating capital, and legal system.
Those advantages are now gone.
They have been building infrastructure like mad and ours has been rotting. Our suppliers are leaving so where once it was easier to be here, now it is harder.
They have matched our level of education in a single generation. Not for the entire population but the top 200 million can go head to head with us. I think the one child policy had a big impact here. The Chinese invest in their children and those investments were focused on just one.
Our government is busy borrowing all of our capital and taxing the rest.
Our legal system has become a burden and government unreliable (think Chrysler bond holders).
Our one remaining big advantage is possession of the worlds reserve currency but we seem to be trying to blow that as fast as we can.
Even though we no longer have an added value, our labor is still priced at 20x.
If you were going to build a factory to produce something that can be shipped in a container, why would would you build it here?
Our manufacturing base is disappearing at an incredible rate and the jobs that go are never coming back.
sreeb
ParticipantThe letter doesn’t say monthly. It is only a 15% increase over the previous year. Was he really paying $51K the year before. I’m a skeptic.
If true, he really needs to have a word with those Democrats in congress who just saddled him with an extra $20K of tax on his “Cadillac” health plan.
sreeb
ParticipantThe letter doesn’t say monthly. It is only a 15% increase over the previous year. Was he really paying $51K the year before. I’m a skeptic.
If true, he really needs to have a word with those Democrats in congress who just saddled him with an extra $20K of tax on his “Cadillac” health plan.
sreeb
ParticipantThe letter doesn’t say monthly. It is only a 15% increase over the previous year. Was he really paying $51K the year before. I’m a skeptic.
If true, he really needs to have a word with those Democrats in congress who just saddled him with an extra $20K of tax on his “Cadillac” health plan.
sreeb
ParticipantThe letter doesn’t say monthly. It is only a 15% increase over the previous year. Was he really paying $51K the year before. I’m a skeptic.
If true, he really needs to have a word with those Democrats in congress who just saddled him with an extra $20K of tax on his “Cadillac” health plan.
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