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MrScorpio

(73,631 posts)
Sun Nov 25, 2012, 09:18 AM Nov 2012

My wife and I moved into a new place last week [View all]

Last edited Sun Nov 25, 2012, 07:53 PM - Edit history (1)

The place is newer and the rent is cheaper, so it's all good, plus she's happy with the new digs. If MrsScorpio is happy then I'm happy. You all know how it is. We're still in the process of settling in… There really is nothing more than I hate than packing and unpacking, but it's all part of the deal when you move.

I called Two Men and a Truck and they quoted me a price that was over two hundred dollars more than the bottom line of renting a UHaul truck and doing it myself. Friends and family helped with the big stuff, but especially with my back issues, I'm still recovering as we speak.

With all that's happened I've had a few observations that I'd like to share. In the last few years we bought some inexpensive Chinese made furniture. Well, a lot that shit was so flimsy that it didn't survive the move. I actually tore the broken pieces down by hand and left them in boxes for garbage pickup, while the 20+ year old American made stuff that we bought right after we got married made it. A few nicks and scratches as it were, but intact.

I filed that fact in the back of mind just in time to see something on PBS that connected some dots for me. Hopefully you've all had the chance to see that episode of Frontline on childhood poverty in around the Illinois/Iowa border region.

Many of the people living there fell into poverty during the last ten years when jobs and factories packed up and were moved overseas to places like China, where my cheaply made furniture was manufactured. Good paying jobs lost by Americans doing high quality work, making things that last. Those jobs afforded local investment, tax revenues, stronger communities of people who paid their mortgages and car notes for new cars.

Instead, vulture capitalists sent those jobs away. Now they're obscenely rich from destroying American livelihoods, causing the deterioration of America communities, all while exploiting cheap labor outside of America.

But that's not the only thing: There's the aftermath of Sandy, which exposes the raw nerve of our antiquated infrastructure. We have a power grid that's falling apart and expensive to maintain, we're not investing in modern technology, as is Western Europe.

All of this speaks to this country's failure to make proper priorities. Much of that power grid that I spoke of before is in decline by design. Not enough skilled workers are hired to even maintain the system in good times, much less to recover from a major disaster like Sandy. Where Europe is investing heavily in new wind and solar systems, we're still relying mainly on fossil fuel powered plants. We should be training and hiring more energy workers, building and installing wind, solar and geo-thermal systems, investing in renewable energy sources, modernizing and burying power lines.

We should be upgrading our entire telecom systems. Since I've been here in my new place, I couldn't help but notice the frequent outages while we've been having some bad weather this week. Internet speeds in the US pale behind higher and more reliable service in Asian and European countries.

We need to invest in rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure. So many bridges, roads, sewer systems, water treatment plants, levies, dams and canals that are in need of attention.

What much is apparent is that quality of life in America is regressing. Americans need to take back their lives from the corporations that are destroying our livelihoods with cheap, foreign made goods, the destruction of good paying American jobs, the selling off and speculation of public resources and general divestiture in America.

The frontline of the fight right now is on the picket line walked by Walmart employees, who are rejecting the way that that corporation treats its workers as if they're wage slaves. Earlier this month, America rejected a vulture capitalist who wanted to treat the entire country as he did one of his own companies that he outsourced to place like China, the country in which my cheap and flimsy furniture was made.

We need to put money back into this country. That means fixing the tax code which has facilitated the loss of jobs and the overwhelming upward redistribution of wealth that has destroyed working class families. We need to get back to building higher quality of goods, that we used to build in the past, instead of flooding our own market with stuff that falls apart. We need to put good money into America itself, instead of standing idly by while it crumbles under our feet and over our heads.

We need to reduce the size of our military. Clearly the greatest threat against us is not from foreign sources, but our own lack of action at home, our willingness to sacrifice American workers for cheap labor, our lop-sided upward distribution of wealth, our unwillingness to address poverty and penchant for doing things on the cheap.

We spend billions on "security" and "defense" against hypothetical attackers while things are falling apart from neglect.

We need to turn things around, people. If we don't, there won't be an America to hand down to our successors. All there will be are broken pieces that were made by foreign workers overseas.

75 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Allow me to be the first K&R Fumesucker Nov 2012 #1
You are absolutely right. LiberalEsto Nov 2012 #2
NIcely put, although this has been obvious for quite some time. The question is... gilpo Nov 2012 #3
We have what are essentially sulphurdunn Nov 2012 #30
exactly! n/t gilpo Nov 2012 #37
Gilpo, I share your frustration truedelphi Nov 2012 #70
We did much of this to ourselves n2doc Nov 2012 #4
That's where I've been 2naSalit Nov 2012 #48
Amen-- now we just need to build that political movement, and soon NoMoreWarNow Nov 2012 #5
I see this more as a culture problem than a government problem gilpo Nov 2012 #7
I think a first step is that most of us have had to step back from the frenzied consumerism Squinch Nov 2012 #13
Lower wages force people to buy cheaper goods, unfortunately juajen Nov 2012 #59
Wonderful post Scorpio! D&R juajen Nov 2012 #60
not going to happen so long as wages keep spiraling down. HiPointDem Nov 2012 #64
"Ah America.. We Saw it, We Tipped it Over... and Then Iggy Nov 2012 #6
What it boils down to is they don't need us anymore. zeemike Nov 2012 #8
I don't know how often sulphurdunn Nov 2012 #31
Too true. But let me point out, about cheap Chinese products.... Honeycombe8 Nov 2012 #9
We've become a fixer upper country lunatica Nov 2012 #10
Kinda like a cheap sulphurdunn Nov 2012 #33
Let's organize here at DU rainin Nov 2012 #11
+1 freshwest Nov 2012 #41
So did I and I said... 2naSalit Nov 2012 #53
I'm in. 2naSalit Nov 2012 #55
The fall of capitalism is much like the fall of communism. valerief Nov 2012 #12
Any system left unfettered The Wizard Nov 2012 #18
You need to send this to Pres. Obama. This sort asjr Nov 2012 #14
I watched a video yesterday on this site of shoppers at Walmart. CrispyQ Nov 2012 #15
MrScorpio Turbineguy Nov 2012 #16
Really is. I wish he'd post more OPs as long as this. freshwest Nov 2012 #42
K&R! Right on brother, I couldn't agree more! The fall of the Roman Empire did not happen Dustlawyer Nov 2012 #17
How about "Invest in America" as a slogan? starroute Nov 2012 #19
"Invest in America" is not a bad start... XtopherXtopher Nov 2012 #22
Better yet, how about "Invest in America" as a LAW? Occulus Nov 2012 #45
Outstanding. H2O Man Nov 2012 #20
It's hard for this country to invest into infrastructure glowing Nov 2012 #21
When were those utilities privatized in the US? OldEurope Nov 2012 #43
Socialism isn't bad in concept, it's when it is corrupted 2naSalit Nov 2012 #51
Very interesting, thank you. OldEurope Nov 2012 #62
Perhaps so... 2naSalit Nov 2012 #63
to add one more point 2naSalit Nov 2012 #65
I often wonder if I'll see America come back in my lifetime. XtopherXtopher Nov 2012 #23
Preach it, brother! n/t orbitalman Nov 2012 #24
Don't forget Hi-Speed Trains.. HipChick Nov 2012 #25
Check this out - RC Nov 2012 #36
Buying American SAVES $$ mikki35 Nov 2012 #26
And custom cabinets for the kitchen/bath are better and no more expensive. SharonAnn Nov 2012 #54
Very true! burrowowl Nov 2012 #68
Best of everything to you and the Mrs. in the new place. geckosfeet Nov 2012 #27
it is heaven05 Nov 2012 #28
Thom Hartmann - Unequal Protection - A Great Read On Corporate Personhood cantbeserious Nov 2012 #29
So very true. K&R Riley18 Nov 2012 #32
So beautifully and eloquently said, my dear MrScorpio! CaliforniaPeggy Nov 2012 #34
Our economy depends on our over-consumption pandr32 Nov 2012 #35
That's great, thanks for posting it! Populist_Prole Nov 2012 #58
i posted something similar back in 2007 NMDemDist2 Nov 2012 #38
Way to connect the dots. SalviaBlue Nov 2012 #39
About those movers... MyTwoSense Nov 2012 #40
Which is bullshit, because he used U-Haul and not ChinaHaul. Occulus Nov 2012 #46
Well written Rocky888 Nov 2012 #44
We are living femrap Nov 2012 #47
The obvious place to start is opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership. hay rick Nov 2012 #49
k+r! TeamPooka Nov 2012 #50
Most Excellent Post !!! - K & R !!! WillyT Nov 2012 #52
Good Observations MagickMuffin Nov 2012 #56
This should be a column for the New York Times or something. Flying Squirrel Nov 2012 #57
shopping USA-made ChristianDemocratMom Nov 2012 #61
I have purchased from the Made in USA Forever site. The site's owner was a former Tech bluestate10 Nov 2012 #73
preach it, MrScorpio Skittles Nov 2012 #66
Great job. ProudProgressiveNow Nov 2012 #67
well yes that is exactly what happened and pretty much everyone knows it Douglas Carpenter Nov 2012 #69
Another bell run was on PBS...The Dust Bowl, and it paints the same story... MrMickeysMom Nov 2012 #71
Yes, I saw it the same way MrScorpio Nov 2012 #72
Couldn't agree more. xxqqqzme Nov 2012 #74
Very thorough analysis, and eloquently put Hekate Nov 2012 #75
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