Thursday, October 24, 2024
Comments: American Industries are collapsing
American Industries Are Collapsing
Difference Frames the World
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American Industries are starting to fall. Can America recover from its mistakes and take back what's theirs?
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Difference Frames the World
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162 Comments
Eng Lam Yeo
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@fredlim9031
5 days ago
Boeing made in Endia ??? Boeing is going from bad to worst ! Made in Endia spells disaster 😮
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4 replies
@twu905
4 days ago
Make America Great Again clearly admits that America is not great anymore.
24
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@multipolarworldorder
5 days ago
The HEGEMON is finished.
61
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5 replies
@prikitieuw1386
5 days ago
Gone With the Wind
25
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@kubaebo6930
5 days ago
If manufacturing returns to America, who will buy their expensive products?
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16 replies
@deepone5005
5 days ago
The US is done.. Period.
71
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5 replies
@duinay3
4 days ago
if manufacturing was profitable in the US, it would already be made in the US
18
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@mohmeegaik6686
4 days ago
Thank you for the concise history of the period of THE US industrial past.
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@GoldNugget138
5 days ago
Complacency is a killer
26
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@wongcilik5960
5 days ago
KARMA OF ACTIONS.
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3 replies
@dennislam2340
5 days ago
Built bad backward.
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3 replies
@soonlooitan71
5 days ago
America industrial is like sleepy joe keep falling N collapsing 😂
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@taiwanstillisntacountry
5 days ago
Do a vid about American companies with a little-Indian CEO.
How they hire their fellow-citizens to work.
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2 replies
@raymondchan7839
4 days ago
Once collapsed, recovery is a dream. Good luck and god bless. ❤❤❤❤❤
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1 reply
@limhui1176
4 days ago
3 words for the US: corrupt, greedy and bankrupt!
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@Bill-r9z
4 days ago
I work for a US based business. They send work to Canada cause they can’t make the product. Lack of skill !!!!!! 😢
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@chowlok5768
4 days ago
The political gangs in Washington violate every principles of capitalism that the US have developed in the past, namely, the market economy. They replaced with their own political agenda and political interference exercise. For example, setting high tariff is by itself a form of protectionism of the worse kind, which can weakened the country's competitiveness and strengthened her competitors. The first step US should take in order to revive her industry is to follow the market principles, that is , select based on the best quality to price ratio, not of political preference. The case in point is Boeing. By NOT subcontract any parts or services to China, the company choose the "Second Best" yet a political ally, i.e., India. The results speak for itself. When an industry deliberately work against the principle of market economy, the whole industry suffers. Worse yet, the result of not getting the best value from the world, you strengthened your competitors, and motivate them to work harder and become stronger to work against you.
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@liaojohnweechun7454
4 days ago
GREAT INFORMATIVE VIDEO 👍
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@simonyu4077
5 days ago (edited)
Why Boeing hires many more engineers in India than in China? Cost consideration or is the present CEO of Boeing an Indian executive?
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5 replies
@henk7356
4 days ago
What is Dave Calhoun's salary as Boeing CEO? According to Nasdaq, Calhoun's 2023 compensation totaled $32.77 million, up 45% from the year before. He received $1.4 million in base salary, $30.23 million in stock awards, and an additional $1.14 million in other compensation. >>> HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE IN A CRUMBLING COMPANY ????
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@Bill-r9z
4 days ago
Countries should only manufacture thing that they are good at. Us is not good at anything.
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@nyachah1908
4 days ago
Thankful to you geopolitics is better understood by ordinary people.. awesome!!!
5
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@nyachah1908
4 days ago
Very insightful always on point.. great job 👍🏿
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@MoneyballTV
4 days ago
Most Americans have forgotten how to work and compete, and must be reminded or compelled.
3
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@casablanca2778
4 days ago
That's a good news for the US.
Taste your own medicine.
You sanction others is sanctioned yourself 😂😂😂😂😂
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@Ghost-mg5xz
4 days ago
Thank s for the news.
1
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@cedcol356
4 days ago
It's capitalism that is collapsing
2
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@ric6074
4 days ago
US products very expensive.
1
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@DontPanicUsa
5 days ago
Goodbye UAS
☠....RIP
13
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2 replies
@rashidbagewadi1006
4 days ago
Not industries but America's downfall starts now.
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@andrewlin6136
5 days ago
See this is how you make America great again 😂😮😅😊
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2 replies
@yingxu7908
4 days ago
It is rotting off at the fasted time
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@donatwu3128
4 days ago (edited)
US' problem is helplessly structural. It is more than re-industrialization in technical & trading aspects. It has its fundamental problem of how to induce its people to happily engage in manufacturing in lieu of finance & services works. Manufacturing industry needs sufficient market for its products. Would Americans be happy to work hard with pays which are less than before so as to make US products competitive in the world market? To be honest, average Americans do not have the same working skills & attitude as working people of developing countries. How could US compete with others in the world?
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1 reply
@SelfieKumarJi
4 days ago
You just have to print more money. Everything is going to be alright.
1
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@radhakrishna1845
5 days ago
Somewhere I saw... Boing's first cheif engineer a Chinese..
B52 Designed by an Indian... Later persecuted....
3
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@keno6136
5 days ago
And nobody goes to jail
3
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@Wbliss
4 days ago
Oops ! for Boeing co; disasters waiting round the corner when quality is compromised with outsourcing its labor to another country , not known for aircraft manufacturing prowess !
2
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@SANN-1969
5 days ago
Enough is enough real life and success no more
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3 replies
@suzannesuzanne8947
5 days ago
MYR 6.00
Thanks
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@hansengkong8186
3 days ago
Superb analysis and insight into the nature of the flaws in policy governing manufacturing in the United States. This is always a structural issue . Structural issues by nature cannot be resolved easily . The fish rots from the head down. The only things preventing a really castastrophic economic implosion are the vast natural resources in a continental size country, in particular , oil and natural gas and ,the immense talent of the ruling elites to make war and manipulate many many other countries , such as Europe, Middle East, Japan, South Korea ,etc. in fear and conflicts with each other to their detriment . The " Wolfowitz Doctrine "(1994-1999) espouses these kinds of policies . Manufacturing is too much of a hard work for them to consider.
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@bboystretch7788
5 days ago
thx guys
1
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@myk1ll332
5 days ago
HELLO EVERYONE
Watching from KSA
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@DontPanicUsa
5 days ago
Goodbye UAS
RIP
5
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1 reply
@yu-jd5jg
5 days ago
Not surprising though as many other countries in the world today can produce equivalent products at a fraction of the costs. The good and easy days for the US are well over and it will have to undergo a very long period of painful adjustment and adaptation
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1 reply
@boomerang1125
4 days ago
Clinton signed NAFTA in 1993. The Obama/Biden administration embraced the Trans Pacific Partnership @ 2010 and we watched most large scale American manufacturing move to China. The engineering, service departments and general administration of the companies stayed in the US but the production, tooling, sourcing of piece-parts and its raw material all moved to China. Sales plummeted. Work forces were laid off permanently and the situation hasn't improved, even with all the political sloganeering and empty promises from both parties. Meanwhile China has been building business relationship with other 'safe' countries, either in Southeast Asia to currently Mexico, to manufacturing their products in those low cost areas to avoid tariffs and Biden's sanctions thus creating an extra link in the supply chain by running 'finished product production' through friendly 3rd countries like Vietnam, India, Thailand, Singapore, now Mexico is in discussions with China, South America is in the process of embracing China. The weaponization of the Petro-dollar is also driving soaring demand by BRICS countries and a long waiting list of other countries who want to join BRICS to drive the "de-dollarization" worldwide, which will result in plummeting value, excessive currency of the world stage which in turn drives up inflation and more misery for the lower, middle and even those entering the professional class. You have to be making well into the 6 digits per household not to be infected by what may become reality by perhaps 2030. Labor Unions are also Dinosaurs and relics of 1924, not 2024. This plummets enthusiasm for "building it in America" if they have to contend with greedy, needy, bad-faith bargaining labor unions who also fight automation, state of t he art manufacturing technologies and try wholeheartedly to keep things as labor-intensive as possible. This is what drove countries to create then flee from "The Rust Belt" during the 1970's. As a baby-boomer who spent 40 years in Corporate America, I saw the whole thing unfold and "blue collar" middle class work forces become hopelessly unemployable as 19th century factories were too costly to upgrade, the OPEC oil embargo of the 70's made energy costs for those almost 100 year old plants non-feasible, unions going on strike demanding more, more, more from an economy in recession and inflation sky-rockets during the inept Carter administration. High taxes and no state government help in potential renovations of aging plants was the deathblow. In sum: American manufacturing has been in a gloom loop since the early 1970's. I realistically see no easy path back nor do I see viable, marketable prices for American consumers if they do move back. After the world recovered from WWII, the American manufacturing sector of the economy has been plummeting.
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@sfukuda512
5 days ago
There is a fundamental threshold that must be met before a nation can be described as a manufacturing nation. Infrastructure: goods must be easy to transport. You don't need high speed rail, but bare minimum are efficient ports and a semblance of order when it comes to freight transport. Education: you need an educated workforce which can adapt to changing times. Due to the policies of both political parties, the education of Americans is abysmal. Ignorant citizens vote for incompetent politicians. This is the preferred arrangement.
My belief is that the US should focus on much more high-end manufacturing: AI chips, pharmaceuticals, exotic materials. China will eventually dominate these industries, but the US has no hope of competing in something like solar panel manufacturing. Thankfully, panels are cheap, meaning cheap electricity for all, unless you are so short-sighted that you put tariffs on them.
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@isokabooks3758
5 days ago
What American industries, Boeing?
1
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@stevenyong3144
1 day ago
Karma is coming
Reply
@thecomment9489
5 days ago
These videos end abruptly. Please check why and upload full length videos.
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Difference Frames the World
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1 reply
@WoWu-d5x
5 days ago (edited)
Thats the Price for shareholder value
1
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@stevenlow8452
4 days ago
The best part,they dont know it n thinking everyone is comfortable with their PARIAH BEHAVIOR ?
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@davidchong7984
4 days ago
Google it and you'll find that the first aeronautical engineer employed by Boeing was a Chinese, Wong Tsu ( or Wong Tsoo). In fact, i read somewhere that he was the first Chief Engineer of Boeing. Anyway, in Google it listed a causasian as the first Chief Engineer. Anyway, what i want to stress is that why is Boeing finding it so important to replace the chinese with another race. It's laughable because Boeing's early beginning had a chinese in it too. Maybe you people may want to do a story on Wong Tsu and remand the US government of their stupidity. 😂
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@Raytracer96024
5 days ago
W ameriKKKa
1
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@karenfreeman1601
5 days ago
Now is the time to duplicate others for items we purchased internationally and can't do without.
We have over 770 interesting global made in America home brands. Plus big guys.
1
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@chrism2966
5 days ago
For various reasons, US made products are overpriced. Not in the US as they live in a high-price society, but abroad, where standards of living are nowhere near so high, US prices are too high. If living costs in the US can be lowered then US prices will be affordable still. The cost of healthcare, gas, food, power & mains gas need to be lowered. These are all major factors in costs and prices for everyone, every corporation and small business. Lower these and all prices can be reduced.
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@ricksadler797
4 days ago
Yuri besminov much ???
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@TacticalMayo
5 days ago
This is the worst cope I have ever seen. Western companies have left China and are still leaving China. One of the head people at the IMF stated that China can no longer keep economic growth through manufacturing. This is what is known as the middle income trap. The United States is now at 28.6 trillion while the people's Republic of China is still at 18 trillion dollars. PPP per capita does not matter in the world of geopolitics and great power rivalries.
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5 replies
@thndrngest
5 days ago
Industrialization is a linear process, remember the british auto industry? No, it cannot recover or revive, what is gone, is gone for the nation.
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