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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]pampango
(24,692 posts)82. Good point. It is "odd" about it is that FDR's own country has forgotten those lessons while
a continent far away has remembered them.
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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