• astrsk@fedia.io
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    12 days ago

    That poll showing 80% of voters want manufacturing jobs to come back to America but 20% of voters would willingly choose to work a factory job says everything.

    • okwhateverdude@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Yeah, it says why are we schlepping parts all over the world to be assembled by poors in SEA, when we got our own poors stuck in the middle of the country with nothing to do but meth and fentanyl.

      /s

      On a more serious note, moving manufacturing back to the states will take some stupid number of years even if they start now, just to build the factories and the associated infrastructure. If only voters hadn’t let the capitalist class gut domestic manufacturing in the first place…

      • NABDad@lemmy.world
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        11 days ago

        moving manufacturing back to the states will take some stupid number of years even if they start now

        Now, come on. I’ve been to Bethlehem, PA! The facility is just sitting there waiting to be used!

        /s

    • tootoughtoremember@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      People would work factory jobs, if they were good paying jobs.

      If you could own a home, afford groceries, raise a family, save for retirement, and take a modest family vacation, there would be lines out door applying for these jobs.

      But these aren’t the factory jobs of the 1950s, those kind of wages aren’t coming back.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      I want manufacturing jobs to come back. We are transitioning to new technologies where there are not yet entrenched manufacturing dominance: it would be much easier to create jobs related to this, supplies chains related to this, market domination is still possible. We were late to the game after throwing away the early lead but we had our chance. We had investments. We had the economy finally turning. Yep, threw that away too.

      We were finally turning toward indefinite energy independence. Still trying to throw that away.

      All to fight the industrial battles of half a century ago, try to compete where there are no longer jobs, fight to wrest control of supply chains from entrenched leaders, compete on race to the bottom salaries