Thursday, February 4, 2010

You want jobs, buy American

Jobs are being lost here in the United States everyday and they are not getting replaced with high quality jobs. What has happened to our skilled labor here in the United States? Why don’t we make anything anymore? All I see is made in China, Indonesia, or Thailand. Most of the items made her are so inferior to made in the USA.


When was the last time you bought a suitcase that did not rip the first time you brought it on a plane. How many jackets do you have that the zipper is broken on them? My son has more toys that are made in China that break so easily that they seem like one day throw a way’s.

America has the best engineers and yet they ship their plans to countries with no quality control to make products that are inferior. America’s factories are closing and the goods made overseas are substandard. Why? Why is there not an uproar?

Cheap labor equals cheap goods and it means more losses of American jobs. The economy will never be where we want it to be until we as a people stop and think it through.

Many of us in America have been conned into believing that products made in America either do not exist anymore, or are somehow inferior to foreign products. This kind of consumer manipulation is causing many of our product manufacturers to either go out of business or file bankruptcy. As a result of this, much of our quality American-made products are becoming virtually impossible to find in our stores. People need to realize that the power of maintaining our work force in America is not in the hands of our elected politicians, but this awesome power is ultimately in the hands of the American consumer - period. If our stores and businesses don't comply to our demand by making American-made products available for the consumer, we should simply refuse to buy from them at all.

Now is the time for us to begin to think, "America First," by insisting that our stores sell domestically made products. By just checking the labels of each product of purchase or simply asking store employees to point out products that are made in America we would immediately begin to see the magnitude of our power as consumers. Our companies would begin hiring again, American jobs would begin to return, foreclosures would again become the exception instead of the rule, and prosperity would again come to our cities and communities. The future of our great country depends on our power to maintain our manufacturing base.

America is not only the land of the free and the home of the brave, it is also the land of opportunity for our children. We must put aside our zeal to purchase the cheapest or least costly products, and realize that when we buy "American made," we not only contribute to American jobs, but also to the fabric of future generations. We must begin to ask ourselves, what is more important, buying the least costly products or saving our country from being acquired by foreign governments?

We all know that the primary reason that foreign-made products are cheaper than American-made products is because there are virtually no labor laws in these countries at all. People in labor markets in these countries are subjected to "sweatshops," or slave labor, working in deplorable conditions in locked buildings which are subsidized by their governments.



We have the power to change the fate of manufacturing in America if we stand together and demand to be once again given the option of buying products made in the U.S. I for one do not want my grandchildren to be faced with the prospect of living in the United States of China. We have the power to change the course of America's future if we have the will. Have you or one of your relatives lost a job? Do you know someone personally who has lost his or her job? If so, then remember that when you buy a foreign-made product that you have contributed to the loss of American jobs. Remember our motto, "Out of Many One." Has the meaning of these words changed in the 21st century? Are we no longer in the thing together? Have we become simply individuals in a global economy? Buy American-made products and help save our economy. Insist that your community businesses buy and sell products made in America.

Competition is great as long as the wages are fair for all. When competition is fair American companies can compete with any country anywhere, whether in quality, quantity or cost, even with foreign governments' subsidies. American manufacturers make the greatest products in the world, when the playing field is leveled. Unfair labor practices by foreign governments have jaded world trade and has undermined trade agreements everywhere.

When we place our trust in God and come together as one nation there is no obstacle that Americans cannot overcome

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Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Weekly Thought Bonanza Feb 3rd

On Sunday/Monday (or Wednesday after my week’s vacation), I produce a column called “The Weekly Thought Bonanza”. The column is based on all of the random thoughts that run through my head all week, and trust me there are a plethora of them. I will try to share as many of these thoughts as I can, so each one of my readers can think just a little bit extra over the coming week.


February sweeps bring all the stars to the small screen. Some of the best television of the year happens this month. Too bad there is eleven months of terrible television in between.

Madonna was an incredibly talented entertainer about fifteen years ago. To me she gets one of my “lost their fastball” awards.

Microsoft’s new search engine Bing seems to be a winner for Microsoft to gain a bit of Google’s stranglehold on the web’s search engine monopoly. Is it me or do every time you hear the word Bing, you think of Chandler Bing, aka Matthew Perry, from Friends.

Why would a company name their product Smart Water? It is water for the love of god.

A father this week shot both his daughter and wife over the stresses of college tuition bills. First off there is not a reason in the world that you should ever do harm to a woman over anything, especially using a weapon. Secondly and most importantly, if you feel the urge to shoot others first please shoot yourself.

Former Red Sox shortstop Nomar Garciaparra is "widely expected" to retire, according to a report in the San Francisco Chronicle. The 1997 American League Rookie of the Year, Garciaparra was with Boston until the middle of the 2004 season, when he was traded to the Cubs. Garciaparra finished his nine-plus years in a Red Sox uniform with 178 homers and 690 RBI, to go along with a .323 batting average. A six-time All-Star and former batting champ, he spent the tail end of his career with the Dodgers and Athletics but never managed to find the same level of success he had earlier in his career in Boston. “Nomah” will always be loved in Boston.

Leverage is one show worth watching on TNT.

My second “lost their fastball award” goes to Joan Rivers. If I never see her plastic surgery done face again it will be too soon.

About 40 percent of cancers could be prevented if people stopped smoking and overeating, limited their alcohol, exercised regularly and got vaccines targeting cancer-causing infections, experts say.



To mark World Cancer day on Thursday, officials at the International Union Against Cancer released a report focused on steps that governments and the public can take to avoid the disease.

According to the World Health Organization, cancer is responsible for one out of every eight deaths worldwide - more than AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined. WHO warned that without major changes, global cancer deaths will jump from about 7.6 million this year to 17 million by 2030. In Western nations, experts said many of the top cancers - like those in the lungs, breasts and colon - might be avoided if people changed their lifestyle habits. To reduce their risk, the agency recommended that people stop smoking, limit their alcohol consumption, avoid too much sun, and maintain a healthy weight through diet and exercise. Let’s take note of this folks.

The Weekly Thought Bonaza Thought of the week; Former GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin on Monday called for President Obama to fire his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, because of an offensive comment he reportedly made. At an August strategy session of liberal groups and White House aides, the Wall Street Journal recently reported, Emanuel told liberals they were "F-ing retarded" for planning to air attack ads against conservative Democrats opposed to health care reform.
Palin, whose youngest child has Down Syndrome, said in Facebook note that "our president is doing himself a disservice by seeming to condone Rahm's recent sick and offensive tactic." If Karl Rove said this, the liberal media would have had his head on a platter.



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Please forward to your friends and colleagues to enjoy. The more readers I have, the more money that is raised for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute.

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