| I think Corningware is made in Corning, NY. |
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Food is not 100% made in the USA.
Much of the fertilizer comes from Canada |
It was coal miners, not auto workers. Coding pays better and gives you more flexibility than coal mining, a job that has been going extict for decades. Telling people you'll pay them to learn to do a better job is not the same as telling people they should take a worse job that doesn't exist. |
Which is also food. |
With leaking roof...
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Nobody cares about your Canadian potash. Go make your own. |
We have chip foundries in the US. |
And old sock factories. Probably not together though. |
NP. Anyone who needs a job. Anyone who recently lost their job. What kind of question is that? |
Many of those old factories also have major toxic contamination — you can’t pay anyone to take them off your hands because of the liability associated with them. |
I think OPs question was about price increases. So you may buy hersheys chocolate made in PA but if they are importing cocoa and vanilla that is subject to tariffs, those prices will increase and they will potentially lay off or furlough American workers as consumer demand drops. That’s true for basically every product made in America. It’s unusual to be able to fully source from America. Back in the pandemic, a lot of American factories stood idle because they couldn’t get certain key components from abroad. Were all just so interconnected now — you can’t unmake the omelette. |
When will the factories be up and running and what will those jobs pay? Will they pay a living wage? Will Americans be willing to pay much, much more for products the factory produces than we pay currently for goods made in China? |
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Cocoa is extreeeeeeemly expensive!
So that's a great example of an American co Hersey's feeling the effects of global economics. It is 2025 - isolationism is a death sentence for any country. You can be rich or poor, you CANNOT go it alone. |
So, we actually know this isn't true. There are jobs that Americans simply won't take, even the long term unemployed - particularly in the ag sector but also assembly line jobs. And a lot of the layoffs in white collar sectors mean people cannot support their families on blue collar wages. People are not fungible like that. It's fun to say "well they should sell their houses and move for a factory job" but that's not what happens in reality. (That's also why federal layoffs will not fix the teacher shortage, BTW.) |
And lacking updated electrical and fire suppression systems and probably filled with asbestos. But yeah, yank on those bootstraps, children of Florida, and build your way into being fully prepared for your next hurricane. |