|
Re: NAFTA: Terrorism against the People
Quote:
Originally Posted by Americano
Not at all. I just don't consider minuscule gain in exports due to a failing currency a positive circumstance for the US consumer facing higher priced imports with stagnated wages. What does a post-industrial country with a weak currency that consumes more than it produces really have in the way of competitive exports other than government subsidized goods and services. That has little to do with NAFTA other than making Canadian commodity goods including the all important oil and electrical power far more expensive for US consumers. Even the Peso is up against USD.
Since you seem to be a firm believer in government numbers and feel-good propaganda without reference to which economic tier is wealthier or the effect of NAFTA I'll make only one comment and that's a suggestion you examine how unemployment was calculated at the beginning of the Reagan administration, comparing that to current calculations. I won't even get into the types of jobs currently being generated as versus the 1980s. As I stated, the US hasn't lost any significant number of jobs due to NAFTA.
|
I'm sorry. I never realized that economic data is government propaganda. Do enlighten me about it.
__________________
"Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
|