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In reply to the discussion: My main concerns with the TPP, TISA, TTIP, etc. are not job losses but the [View all]GoneFishin
(5,217 posts)67. Sending jobs overseas, importing questionable food products, jacking up pharmaceutical prices,
polluting our drinking water, and screwing over the American public in countless other ways cannot be excused away with convoluted dubious blather.
The long winded defenses of TPP are absurd on their face and deserved to be summarily dismissed because they all amount to reasons why average Americans should take it up the ass for multinational corporations to make even more mega profits while snuffing out any faint traces of democratic rule that might remain in America.
Fuck the TPP.
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My main concerns with the TPP, TISA, TTIP, etc. are not job losses but the [View all]
cali
Jun 2015
OP
Corporations are given the right to function by the state. The state has every right to regulate
Dont call me Shirley
Jun 2015
#46
Thank you. Cannot be said too often. So many people do not think about this undeniable
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#79
Unfortunately, the intent of our founding Fathers to limit corporate power...
Human101948
Jun 2015
#151
That would be from the ongoing war on public education and misinformation from the media.
Dont call me Shirley
Jun 2015
#155
I think that is what Mitt Romney was trying to get to as well when he said corporations are people.
fasttense
Jun 2015
#90
That is precisely why the TPP and its trade arbitration courts are such a bad idea.
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#103
You wouldn't have to worry about "trade arbitration courts" if it were not for FDR and Truman.
pampango
Jun 2015
#116
Do you prefer for there not to be a WTO arbitrater between corporations and countries?
Recursion
Jun 2015
#6
Higher median wages, lower unemployment, lower discouraged worker rate, higher household income
Recursion
Jun 2015
#26
I think you are confusing the tech "dot com boom" bubble that was being inflated at that time...
cascadiance
Jun 2015
#84
Don't be silly. The dot com bubble destroyed tens of millions of jobs. More than a trade agreement
Recursion
Jun 2015
#123
They built jobs to start with when you quote statistics on what happened with NAFTA...
cascadiance
Jun 2015
#125
No, it destroyed jobs to start with. It was *entirely* about replacing people with software
Recursion
Jun 2015
#127
I'm a UNIX sysadmin and programmer. The only thing software does is replace people
Recursion
Jun 2015
#132
actually this makes sense as we only get world GDP by burning cheap fossil fuels.
airplaneman
Jun 2015
#65
NAFTA did not create more prosperity, the tech balloon did. Lasted until 2000 when it popped. n/t
PowerToThePeople
Jun 2015
#85
Record stores didn't go out of business until more recently with the advent of Itunes, etc.
cascadiance
Jun 2015
#138
If things had gotten better after NAFTA, we would not be arguing against the TPP.
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#106
Things got better only for the .01%. Not for me and the rest of us 99.99%
Dont call me Shirley
Jun 2015
#156
Trade negotiations with the general public's interests fully represented at the negotiating table
Tom Rinaldo
Jun 2015
#13
Huh? China and India have taken more jobs than countries with free trade agreements
Recursion
Jun 2015
#22
Is it your contention that the US actually *has* enforced standards elsewhere?
Jim Lane
Jun 2015
#33
Even the judge selected by Mexico agreed with the decision. In any event, Metaclad lost its plant.
Hoyt
Jun 2015
#57
You lame attempts at citing example is more shameful. You never go further than some headline
Hoyt
Jun 2015
#60
Mexico can't possibly have any better use for its tax dollars than using them--
eridani
Jun 2015
#81
I mean the elected Mexican government trying to move their people from 50 cent a day jobs.
Hoyt
Jun 2015
#93
Sure. Just like after NAFTA fucked them over in the 90s, they'll react by moving here
eridani
Jun 2015
#94
We get it, you have no respect for Mexicans. Do you feel that way about all poor foreign
Hoyt
Jun 2015
#100
Yay! Let's hear it for poor people in rich countries providing financial aid to
eridani
Jun 2015
#101
Corruption. And the proof that the corruption is the reason is the killing fields of Mexico.
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#111
Folks are going to find a rationale(s) to turn our backs on Mexico. That's the way it's always
Hoyt
Jun 2015
#114
I live on a tiny bit of land we "stole" from Mexico. It is quite Mexican. Trust me on that.
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#124
Maybe they think they'll be able to sue us for the ag subsidies we give to big ag here...
cascadiance
Jun 2015
#142
Mexico asked to be part of the TPP? Who in Mexico asked to be part of the TPP??
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#108
So all government officials, even in Bernie Sanders' favorite Scandinavian countries, are Oligarchs
Hoyt
Jun 2015
#109
The Mexican government was required to buy back the property Metalclad had bought
Recursion
Jun 2015
#73
Mexico would have been pleased if all they had to do was refund the purchase price
Art_from_Ark
Jun 2015
#76
So let's make it clear to companies like Metalclad that they have no right to come in, buy
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#115
I want a TA-Trade Agreement for the workers of America, not a Free Market Agreement for the Corp
DhhD
Jun 2015
#36
And you should see all the plastic wrapping in our recycle bins -- wrapping that is necessary
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#107
China and India do not have free trade agreements with the US. You keep skipping that
Recursion
Jun 2015
#110
And we should impose tariffs on their goods in order to protect our industry.
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#126
That's lunatic. It's not "because of corruption" it's "because our GDP would shrink 30%"
Recursion
Jun 2015
#128
Our model is opening the gap between the uber wealthy and the lower 99% at a startling rate.
rhett o rick
Jun 2015
#68
No. The past 20 years have been the biggest reduction of global inequality in world history
Recursion
Jun 2015
#69
I'm sure RoR can defend their statement, but .. this shit again? Comeon...
MrMickeysMom
Jun 2015
#71
Thank you, you said it much better than I. "walking outside your door to find where in the fuck
rhett o rick
Jun 2015
#91
I worked for a homeless agency for years. A lot of my bitterness is due to what I saw there.
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#120
You are way off. The wealth has gone to the 1%. We have massive joblessness and those with
rhett o rick
Jun 2015
#133
Treading water means you are not getting any better or worse. The wealth inequality has grown
rhett o rick
Jun 2015
#143
And if our own legislators were not so corrupt, we would not permit China and India
JDPriestly
Jun 2015
#104
The Loss Of Citizen Sovereignty Over The Political Process To The Corporations Is
cantbeserious
Jun 2015
#40
Corporations are merely empires for their uber wealthy major shareholder owners.
Dont call me Shirley
Jun 2015
#45
What job losses? We're told there'll be no job losses.... except that apparently we need
Guy Whitey Corngood
Jun 2015
#47
When ridiculous court judgments happen - there's a trade agreement behind it.
lumberjack_jeff
Jun 2015
#61
Sending jobs overseas, importing questionable food products, jacking up pharmaceutical prices,
GoneFishin
Jun 2015
#67
I have to wonder how the TPP is going to affect the price of prescription medication
davidpdx
Jun 2015
#82