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In reply to the discussion: The really question about TPP is; "Do we need to sell our stuff to the 5 Billion in the Pacific rim" [View all]Aerows
(39,961 posts)53. It's also impossible to respond with authority
when even those in Congress can't read it without the USTR being there, and their aides can't read it without their Congress member that they work for being there.
But hey, Hoyt said so!
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The really question about TPP is; "Do we need to sell our stuff to the 5 Billion in the Pacific rim" [View all]
CK_John
Apr 2015
OP
No argument here. I'm a strong supporter of those who lean that way. Hillary ain't one of 'em.
NYC_SKP
Apr 2015
#6
If we could have kept Coolidge and Hoover in power perhaps we would be doing that.
pampango
Apr 2015
#20
We stopped supporting our workers. Taft-Hartley was a self-inflicted wound to labor.
pampango
Apr 2015
#32
It's not odd that Europe learned lessons from FDR and Truman. It's odd we pretend we did not.
merrily
Apr 2015
#77
Good point. It is "odd" about it is that FDR's own country has forgotten those lessons while
pampango
Apr 2015
#82
I'm sure you are right. Politicians and economists have not "forgotten". "Chosen to ignore"
pampango
Apr 2015
#86
I'm not sure about that. Most of us would admit that FDR screwed up at times. No excuses.
pampango
Apr 2015
#91
Not really the same thing. FDR has been dead a long time. My references were to what is happening
merrily
Apr 2015
#94
Because it's getting harder for the first world to exploit the third (and ex-second).
Donald Ian Rankin
Apr 2015
#85
The past is gone and done, it just doesn't matter anymore. The world is as it is now.
CK_John
Apr 2015
#5
The past does matter. We still have NAFTA and Korea and they are still affecting us.
merrily
Apr 2015
#84
Huh? The increase in purchasing power you are referring to was miniscule. It's hardly
merrily
Apr 2015
#105
An absolutely true post of mine (#87) is not relevant to the conversation (about trade)
merrily
Apr 2015
#107
It is the neoliberal position that the 99% are far too well off and must be brought down
TheKentuckian
Apr 2015
#99
Ask Germany. They pay their workers more and export almost as much as the US with
pampango
Apr 2015
#24
Agreed. But they still pay their workers more than we do and are tremendous exporters.
pampango
Apr 2015
#41
Maybe is just an excuse to do nothing. Face the facts they don't need our stuff
CK_John
Apr 2015
#13
Big bad corporate bogeyman, has been around since Ben Franklin brought Louisiana.
CK_John
Apr 2015
#17
There's no TPP right now but we're still trading with these countries. n/t
PoliticAverse
Apr 2015
#19
Assuming that actually happens, you can still sue the manufacturer, the importer, the guy who sold
Hoyt
Apr 2015
#37
Whew, you have misinterpreted it badly. That has to do with a corporation like BMW
Hoyt
Apr 2015
#48
Germany has lower tariffs than the US. Imports are 40% of their economy. 14% of the U.S.'
pampango
Apr 2015
#62
I'm sorry, but the argument is garbage on its face. It's a lie meant to distract and deceive.
Xithras
Apr 2015
#46
It's a hypothetical question. Since NAFTA we barely manufacture anything in this country.
GoneFishin
Apr 2015
#60
You are splitting hairs to obfuscate the point that jobs are what put money in the pockets
GoneFishin
Apr 2015
#95
"...the problem is jobs...". No shit. Keeping repeating my point for me. I don't care about exports
GoneFishin
Apr 2015
#100
The real question is whether the TPP partners can afford to meaningfully by our stuff
HereSince1628
Apr 2015
#64