Samuel wrote:In any case, I'm arguing the exact OPPOSITE of Japan stopping it's native rice subsidy. There was a time Japan was self-sufficient in food. If it's not... well, I don't care how prosperous they are, they're taking a big chance on their future.
They don't have enough arable land to feed everyone! Is this so hard to get- it isn't possible for everyone to be entirely self-sufficient.
Yes. They were foolish enough to overpopulate their islands. They have compensated for it brilliantly, nonetheless, they are in the position of being utterly dependent on outside nations in order to feed their own people. I still say that's a stupid and vulnerable position to be in. The best long term solution to this is, of course, to reduce the population to a level where their islands CAN be self-sufficient in food once more. Would be best if
everyone did that. Short of a horrific, global catastrophe, however, it will take generations at best to solve that problem.
Are you seriously arguing that the US should gut its industry even more and put it ALL outside the country?
Because the world is an unpredictable and at times hostile place it is foolish to do something of that sort. Certain vital industries should be not consolidated but distributed to guard against disasters (natural or man-made) from wiping them out, even if that is less efficient than consolidation.
Canada is less prone to natural or man made disasters. Of course if you goal is blatant protectionism than you would automatically reject what I suggested... which you just did.
Please do not put words in my mouth or distort my argument into your preconceptions. Transferring everyone's industry to the Canadian shield might benefit Canadians, but everyone everywhere else would be out of work and starving. Why do you insist on positions so extreme the solutions are as bad, if not worse, than the problems?
But putting ALL your production outside your borders is fucking stupid.
Unless your neighbors are more stable than you or less prone to disaster. In which case it would be better than having them in your nation according to your premises.
No, you fucking moron - putting all your industry outside your borders means your average citizen
has no work and
starves. You are looking SOLELY at the bottom line, as all too many people do these days, and completely forgetting that there are live human beings out there who need to work and earn a living. It's not just a matter of resources management, it's also a matter of not reducing the majority of the population to utter ruin. Unless, of course, you're one of the few elite who own the means of production and thus do not have to give a flying fuck about the miserable living conditions of those around you.
I'm looking for a happy medium, middle of the road approach - you want some interaction with others, but not at the cost of making yourself utterly and completely reliant on the good behavior of the rest of the world.
That is vague enough to be meaningless. You want "vital industries" in the US. Does that only mean heavy industries like steel making or does it also include good industries if they are considered essential to the American way of Life like cars?
You insist on extremism, why I do not know.
Nor am I limiting this discussion SOLELY to the US - but obviously you haven't noticed that, either. A particular country does not have to produce ALL the steel it uses, but it should have a steel industry so that if something happens to those people overseas they don't lose ALL their access to steel products. If all the world cedes steel making to, say, the Chinese because it's cheaper and dismantles all the steel industry outside China then there are two serious problems. 1) China can then jack up prices as much as they want with a captive market and 2) if something happens to fuck up China the rest of the world is fucked, too. Yet more and more steel production is Chinese and nowhere else.
This is global stupidity. Worse yet, it comes from capitalists who SHOULD know the value of some healthy competition.
Let's look at aviation - if it wasn't for Airbus Boeing would more or less hold a monopoly on the large passenger and cargo aircraft. This would not be good in the long term for anyone. Lack competition would lead to complacency in Boeing. Everyone else would be dependent on just one company for an important industry. So I am entirely in approval of there being Airbus, even if its existence is dependent on government subsidy, because it adds competition and keeps nations from being utterly dependent on one source for one thing.
Auto industry? No, America does not
have to have an auto industry - but it SHOULD have manufacturing industry of
some sort. That has been
gutted over the past two decades. All our money pours out of the country for manufactured goods, but what in this country makes the wealth that enables people to buy stuff? Pushing paper and data around? Yeah, that's working real good for us right now.
![Rolling Eyes :roll:](./images/smilies/icon_rolleyes.gif)
We no longer have a diversified economy. We are repeating the "rewards" of that
stupid choice to gut large sectors of our economy in the name of saving a few pennies while ignoring the long-term consequences of that.
Oh, please - the poor got NOTHING from increased prosperity through the 1990's to now.
I was refering to the 3rd world, not the United States.
So was I. WHERE in my references to the poor did I specify "The United States?" Nowhere. YOU read that into what I posted. You aren't reading what I write, you're reading what you want to believe.
The poor in the third world get nothing but hurt - wages just enough to keep them alive (maybe), no health care, no retirement, and all too frequently a legacy of toxic waste from corporations that just don't give a damn about polluting land, water, and air.
If previous conditions weren't
worse, they wouldn't take the jobs.
A choice between starvation and exploitation is hardly a choice at all. The fact people might otherwise starve to death does not make it OK to arrange things such that they will exist in dire poverty for generations, all for the wealth of people in other places.
WHERE did I say "protectionism"? You're leaping to conclusions.
Protectionism is the simplest way to achieve what you are advocating. Unless you mean nationalizing industries? Unlimited immigration to drive down wages for unskilled labor?
WHERE did I say I sought the simplest solution? Nowhere. Again, you are not reading what I'm writing. Nationalizing industries? I'd consider it AFTER an examination of alternatives and consequences. Plenty of other countries have nationalized industries so there is some knowledge to draw on in making these decision if people will look at it dispassionately without dragging in extremist bullshit and political/economic bias. And FUCK NO I am NOT advocating driving down wages for unskilled labor!
That is part of the global problem! What the fuck is wrong with you, that you think it's OK to drive DOWN the wages of the poor? We need to RAISE their wages so they will buy more (the poor almost immediately will spend any increase in wealth, which
benefits the economy) and live better. That doesn't mean making them millionaires, just making their lives a little better. Or do you advocate squalor for a large swath of humanity in order to keep the wealthy wealthy?