Yea LoneSnark, the local farmers market does actually have excellent tomatoes and believe it or not farmers markets are sprouting in heavily urbanized areas.However, loosing manufacturing and textiles is not a major loss to the US, if at all and this has led to the increase in amassed American Wealth. However, this has not led to the increase in wealth among the middle class (stagnant to shrinking in America) or a reduction of poverty levels in America. In fact, most people point to the fact that more people have microwaves and TV's now then ever while not bothering to point out the correlation between increased consumer spending and way over blown consumer debt.RD on the other hand, isn't just arguing against protectionism but he's making broadbased retarded comments such as (paraphrased) "we don't agriculture" and "fire teh engineers!!111." Lets for a moment consider two things happening America right now:1) Trickle of R&D and manufacturing to other countries2) Reduction in the amount of scientists and engineers enrolled and graduating3) A technical workforce approaching retirement age4) Massive foreign investment in foreign government sponsored research and development.This isn't just a villager picking up a needle and decimating Fruit of the Loom, this is a subtle shift globally in information power. I mean you can argue we've survived and advanced for decades and therefore there's no big deal here but there is a massive difference in the economic development of Asia forty years ago and today.We're essentially banking on the fact that we, Americans, will continue to find more creative ways to make money. Thats all and dandy, but in the past forty years this has worked we've also been busily exporting Americana as a whole and I think global understanding of the American economic machine and how it works is far more advanced then Japan circa 1980.
12/8/2006 8:24:36 PM
Look the problem is American sense of entitlement.The have nots think they should have.The have nots are have nots because they dont have what it takes to be haves.They should be thankful we give them enough money to shut up and smoke/drink/inject and EAT instead of starve.Thats the problem with liberals is they think everyone should have wi-fi, cell phones, and vacation homes.If they can eat for free and fuck without repercussions (i.e. we pay for their babies) why do we owe them anything more?For the most part you have three choices in America.1) Bust your ass and amass millions upon millions.2) Work part time and amass a few million.3) Be lazy and have your entitlements.Whats the problem here? I'd be happy with option #2 or option #3IF you can't find your niche then go create your own socialist/failing nation. Or join a subsistent plantantion and farm yourself to death. Work your fucking balls off until you bleed and when you get wrecked by bad weather/extentuating circumstances just throw your hands in the air and die.Otherwise, stop stealing my money.
12/8/2006 8:35:33 PM
12/8/2006 10:00:43 PM
You posting that same old argument, Snarkie. You must really like it. I'm little dubious, as your example doesn't at all relate to reality. (Getting pesos is not a problem.) Even if it's true, the mechanism for preventing competition between the US and Mexico is artifical. It's government imposed. With a universal currency, your argument would go out the window.
12/8/2006 11:07:33 PM
Alright GoldenViper, how do you get pesos? Presumably you have in mind going either to a Bank or a currency trader and giving him dollars in exchange for pesos. But where did they get the pesos? They are not allowed to print them, only the Mexican government can do that. So the currency traders had to find someone on the other side of the border that wanted dollars in exchange for pesos. They do this by changing the exchange rate: if too many Americans want pesos then they start bidding against each other for the finite supply of pesos chasing dollars in Mexico, driving down the dollar and up the peso. As the peso rises American goods become relatively cheaper from the perspective of both Mexicans and Americans, so fewer Americans ask for pesos and more Mexicans ask for dollars. Now, you suggested a universal currency. Again, follow the money. Let us imagine two states in North America, South Carolina and North Carolina. Here the exchange rate is fixed, the dollars are identical. So what happens to us is deflation and inflation."If North Carolina has twice the productivity of South Carolina, and a fixed exchange rate, then the correction is more painful. South Carolinians buy North Carolina's goods, but not vice versa. In effect, South Carolina is importing goods and exporting dollars. With no central bank to inflate South Carolina's money supply dollars become scarce and thus more valuable, prices begin to fall. Conversely, North Carolina is awash in cash, prices begin to rise. Eventually, when the relative price ratio is 2/1, cross border trade equalizes because South Carolinian goods are too cheap to ignore, and North Carolinian goods are too expensive to afford."
12/9/2006 12:15:32 AM
you know what you want to get rid of farmers in america go ahead. I have the knowledge and power to grow my own food to feed myself if doubt many of you can say the same thing. Be careful what you wish for one day you might just get it.
12/9/2006 1:41:10 PM
Aside from a purely theoretical standpoint, I see no people saying we should actively get rid of all american farmers. What I do see people saying is we should cut off government support for farmers who are unable to sustain themselves on the income provided by farming.
12/9/2006 2:20:57 PM
Well the funny thing with farming is that it can be done cheaper in different countries. Hands down in brazil you can pay a labor 5 dollars a day to work for 10 hours while it would cost you over 10 times that amount here. They have no restrictions on their farming procedure in brazil the land is dirt cheap and you can buy it for under a $100 a acre. If you want to see corpertate farming at its best eliminate the the small middle man. What you will end up with is a Wal Mart of a producers. Look at the swine industry as a classic example. You can not be a small farmer of swine in NC any more the packers/buyers do not want to deal with a producer who sells 30 or 40 hogs every 2 weeks they want a huge opperations. Like wise you have seen over a 20 cent increase in pork prices over the past few years. You will have a hard fight to get rid of agiculture folks because its the number one industry in NC. All of the people who think that RTP is the greatest thing for our state need to go look into the agriculture sector and see how much money agriculture supports this state. Take away part of that and see what happens.
12/9/2006 4:25:47 PM
^wow, you managed to make a post where more than half of it was intelligible. Congrats, sweetheart.
12/9/2006 4:49:17 PM
12/9/2006 5:45:26 PM
12/9/2006 6:13:28 PM
12/9/2006 8:55:18 PM
Skokiaan thats a stupid arguement. Quit doing something that helps a economy just so you have the possibility to create something new. Great idea thats like taking your life savings playing the lottery and wishing you win it. Good now you just train those farmers who are 55 a new job. I bet your one of those assholes who is banking on social secruity. Don't worry NC will loose alot of its farmers over the next decade. The average age of farmers in NC is 55. Once again people that don't farm or have never been around it do not understand how difficult it really is. If you hate subsidies why aren't you complainning about the money being poured into Florida, New Orleans and other places after hurricanes hit?? Why give them money right they new that a hurricane will hit and destroy their property?? so screw them right. we don't need them living there when we have so much land they could live some where else.
12/9/2006 9:37:32 PM
^^ wow dude, get a clue.^ laughable. Do you not realize you are promoting poverty in other nations by not allowing them to compete in the market place fairly? You are giving money to our farmers to buy digital cable at the expense of starving villagers. Spending money to rebuild New Orleans isnt stupid at all. Think of it as nationwide insurance. If NC gets wrecked by a Hurricane, the govt will help rebuild it too. There is no justification to just give farmers money for no reason. It hurts the country and it hurts other countries. The only person it helps are the lazy ass farmers who are too stubborn to get a job that this country has a need for.You really have no grasp of economics at all. Familiarize youself with TRACS and sign up for a course sometime so you dont embarrass yourself in future conversations.
12/9/2006 9:40:34 PM
Farm subsidies mainly go to the richest farmers. Snarkie pointed that out earlier. (We don't disagree on everything, sadly.)They also hurt farmers in developing countries. I think it's fair to say that's it's harder to be a farmer in Africa than it is here in NC.
12/9/2006 9:48:20 PM
12/10/2006 12:59:46 AM
12/10/2006 1:15:36 AM
12/10/2006 1:22:36 AM
12/10/2006 2:02:59 AM
12/10/2006 3:21:01 AM
My grandmother worked in the textile industry. She was poor at the time. When it closed she went to work in J.C. Penny for awhile. After that she started her own business and never looked back.
12/10/2006 11:49:52 AM
RallyDruham I have taken business and econ courses i have a minor in both. You can't have a world economy without the entire world participating. Sadly alot of country's do not wish to participate. Secondly no country in africa can produce the level and quality of agriculture than the US can. Your arguement is to assist in developing other countries to compete with us?? The idea of a open free global economy is a great IDEA! making it prectical however is not, if it was we would already see it. You say farmers subsides are killing the economy well then why don't we increase the price of agriculture a bushel of corn is about the same price it was 25 years ago. You can explain supply and demand all you would like but you have yet to offer me a reason of security. How many out breaks of Avian Influenza have been reported in America?? how many have been reported in other country's??? You can say that no country would ever attack us if we buy from them. Look back to WII and Japan no one really thought they would attack the US. When it somes to the basic needs of human beings Food and shelter you can't use economic theory to explain things.
12/10/2006 2:51:30 PM
Well, there is a strong argument that Japan would not have attacked the U.S. given its economic dependence. However, that dependance was scrapped when America embargoed Japan, thus removing the only remaining hinderance to war. Worse than that: not only did Japan no longer have a good reason to maintain Peace, but the crushing effects of the embargo necessitated Japan's invasion of British East Asia to acquire materials no longer available from America. This is not to say the Embargo was not justified, but there is no denying that it limited Japan's options: War with America or surrender in China. Some argue that instead of the embargo America should have stepped up efforts to arm the Chinese insurgents and let Japan ruin itself in Asia, given enough time the Japanese people (and their Emperor) would tire of the war and, after sufficient losses, pulled back with no need to embroil the whole Pacific ocean into WW2 or shed a single American life.
12/10/2006 3:15:24 PM
If you want to end subsidies then end them. You don't have to worry with eliminating subsidies there are less and less farmers each year and less and less land being put into production agriculture. The govenrment gives taxes breaks and insentives to company's to start business's in there state and also to keep their factory's and jobs in america. The subsides are doing the same thing Govnerments are doing each day.
12/10/2006 3:25:22 PM
12/10/2006 3:38:10 PM
12/11/2006 12:19:11 AM
12/11/2006 12:37:44 AM
Odd, maybe I missed it, but I think this is the first time you've mentioned Mexican farmers... Either way, Mexico is where America was a few decades ago. Most of these farmers need to be driven from their land and put to work in the productive sectors of Mexico's economy. But this has nothing to do with trade and everything to do with Mexico's broken-ass form of corporatism. If it isn't the Government then its the criminal organizations stiffling competition and impoverishing the whole of Mexican society. Fox was elected to fix some of this crap, but after a few assasination attempts by the criminal organizations and a back-room revolt by the entrinched elites all his efforts came to nothing. Here's praying the next President manages to do something.
12/11/2006 12:52:18 AM
12/11/2006 1:07:05 AM
Lots of people took up arms the day NAFTA took effect. But I agree with you, all subsidies should be dropped, just as all trade barriers should be dropped. But they have not been dropped, so it is a little unfair for everyone (particularly Americans). That said, if the Mexican economic system was not so broken then these displaced farmers could get jobs elsewhere, just as our farmers are currently capable of doing.
12/11/2006 10:27:37 AM
Well, another problem is that labor isn't free to move. Displaced farmers could get jobs here, but we've made that much harder than it should be.
12/11/2006 3:56:55 PM
Kind of irrelevant. Not everyone in Mexican can move to America, and any "economic model" which relies upon doing so to raise Mexicans out of poverty is rediculous. We need to fix the Mexican economic system, that is the only way to save everyone. And fixing the Mexican economic system has nothing to do with trade, borders, or caring.
12/12/2006 1:05:04 AM
It's not our government's job to provide for the welfare of other countries. It's a noble endevor but it should not come at the cost of our own citizens.
12/12/2006 1:46:15 AM
I kinda did forget to mention that it had "nothing to do with us."
12/12/2006 1:59:57 AM
12/12/2006 10:50:20 AM
Well, "Bad" is a strong word. While we like free trade, I would never suggest that a lack of free movement of goods/capital would make the United States poor. While a lack of international integration hurts, big countries only require free movement of ideas to get and stay wealthy. If God magically fixed the Mexican economic system but did away with the free movement of everything (goods, capital, labor) then Mexico would still industrialize and become wealthy. That is why I said Mexican poverty has nothing to do with trade. Trade can make rich people richer and poor people slightly less poor, It cannot make poor people rich. The same goes with free movement of labor: it would help the average Mexican, but emigration does not break up legal and extra-legal cartels.
12/12/2006 4:03:44 PM
Having free movement of goods and capital but no labor is rather blatantly unfair.
12/12/2006 5:07:21 PM
No, no, no.Free movement of labor is not the same thing as free movement of goods and capital.Free movement of labor is a bad idea because of gov't entitlement programs.
12/12/2006 5:23:42 PM
Wait, so if the # of textiles produced here hasn't gone down, then where are all the mills now? are they hidden somewhere?
12/12/2006 5:26:10 PM
Textiles jobs have left the South.Just as they left the North 100 years ago.Just as they left England 200 years ago.Just as they are leaving China now.Shitty jobs will always move to the shittiest places.We are HAPPY to be rid of shitty jobs. Get that through your head.American manufacturing is at an all-time high. Thats inarguable. We just got rid of the enormous labor force burden and put them into more specialized jobs.America is a SERVICE industry. That means you wont have fucking back problems when you retire and you can enjoy your cruise to Aruba and you can actually sit down for an extended period of time at the slot machines in the Palms Casino.[Edited on December 12, 2006 at 5:55 PM. Reason : a]
12/12/2006 5:52:12 PM
im not going to read all of the bullshit in this thread, but I would like to mention that if farm subsidies are eleminated, some farmers will leave the markets, some will continue. the most dramatic result will be the increase in the price of food. look at the price of milk in the last few years.
12/12/2006 6:23:31 PM
^ the "price" of food might be higher.but the cost of food will be lower.You have no idea how much you are paying for food because the price at Food Lion does not account for the tax money that you paid that was appropriated to the farrmers as a subsidy.So yes you might pay an extra 10 cents for an apple but you wont be wasting 20 cents of tax money on them anymore.Food would definitely be cheaper if we eliminated subsidies, no one would be foolish enough to argue that.
12/12/2006 7:18:03 PM
12/12/2006 7:31:18 PM
I'd love to get rid of them but the blacks would scream ouch and the liberals would burn peoples houses down.
12/12/2006 7:37:57 PM
You could have a guest worker program that got around the problem, you know. Of course, that has its own drawbacks.
12/12/2006 7:40:02 PM
wait, maybe my question was misunderstood.Where in the United States did all the textile mills go if we aren't producing less than we were?
12/12/2006 7:46:04 PM
Textile jobs are disappearing WORLDWIDE. Its not an American thing.Technology replaced a huge percentage of those jobs.Do you want exact numbers? I can get them for you later.American manufacturing as a whole is stronger than its ever been.
12/12/2006 7:51:33 PM
im just trying to educate myself here.i know we still have a massive trade deficit. maybe the point that youre trying to make is that we are producing services to make up for this, not necissarily exportable goods.
12/12/2006 7:55:29 PM
Yes and noAs a whole we are producing more goods than we ever have before. The difference is that the labor force required to do so is much smaller due to improved efficiency & technology.We are becoming a service economy because many of those manufacturing jobs no longer exist period. Yes, we have also lost some to other countries who provide cheap labor, but thats what allows us to buy these goods so cheaply. Would you really want to buy tennis shoes made by someone who makes $10/hr who has healthcare benefits, paid vacations, etc? Do you have any idea how much more expensive they would be?The trade deficit is not a bad thing by any means. People who whine about the trade deficit are idiots for the most part who don't understand anything.Essentially we are giving them financial assets in exchange for goods. We get all the wonderful stuff you see in Sears (electronics) and the cheap clothes you see in Walmarts and in return they get pieces of paper.Their investment in our markets allows us to research and innovate. Innovation is what brings economic growth to our country.Don't underestimate the importance of their investment. The personal savings rate in America is ZERO PERCENT (0%!). Without foreign investment our interest rates would be much higher and research/innovation would be more expensive (and therefore would come about slower). The trade deficit is a good thing. When people stop wanting our pieces of paper, thats when you should get worried.[Edited on December 12, 2006 at 8:15 PM. Reason : a]
12/12/2006 8:10:31 PM
12/12/2006 11:25:54 PM