! It turns out that there is another "Economics 101" by another Hal.
So let's set the story straight, if not for me then for the "other Hal". I am Hal Dumas (please note my email address). I live in Lincoln, NE. I have had a lot of "world experience" that is, traveled all over the world, served in the U.S. Navy (22 years) , been a farmer (winter wheat and fruit trees), Licensed as an NASD registered rep. (that means stock broker). I worked at NASA's Ames Research Center, Mountain View, CA. for about 3 AND A HALF YEARS as a "contract" mission controller for Pioneer Deep Space Project, and observed Halley's Comets, attended several colleges, including De Anza in Cupertino, CA, and graduated from Doane College in 1995, GPA 3.58...
This information should separate me from any other "Hal" who wants to discuss economics, and where we (as a country) are headed, or might be headed.
Now back to "Why do we do what we do" Part 2.
BY the way, I have noticed after rereading my first blog that there are a few type-o's which I apologize for...I will try to keep them to a very minimum.
So here we are.....15-20 million Americans looking for work, and some of us taking lousy minimum wage jobs just to pay the mortgages and feed our families. Many people who have been collecting unemployment until it ran out have "dropped off the charts" because they no longer collect government unemployment, but are still collecting food stamps, or in the case of some Nebraskans, sleeping in their cars under Lincoln's overpasses (viaducts) and standing in food lines at our missions. These people, for the most part, are not being counted as unemployed.
Not to mention the folks young and old that have simply moved in with relatives....some are young people who move back in with mom and dad, but also there are parents who are moving with their children...It works both ways. It depends on who has the jobs.
All the while the "experts" the "talking heads" are saying this is temporary. Basing their ideas on previous recessions that only lasted a few years. But guess what, this isn't the same. This is due to the fact that we have simply allowed too many manufacturing jobs to be sent overseas. There aren't enough jobs.
Hello, ivory tower, you need to go visit the people under the over passes, those standing in food lines....there are millions of people out here hurting economically. You need to do your own shopping for groceries to see just how much inflation we really do have.
Several years ago I (a 30 years GOP type) realized that the GOP wasn't my friend, and unless I was rich AND an entrepreneur they didn't give a whisker about me and mine. So in the last elections, I voted for our now President Obama, who I thought was smart and would actually figure out what we needed to do as a country to recover from this land slide of unemployment and bad economics.
The problem with this is that his ideas are based on those "talking heads" and advisers who keep saying this is temporary, and that we can spend our way out of this. Sorry, Mr. President, we have too many unemployed, too many underemployed and government projects all have to come to an end.
What we need is private industry jobs that will last for years. The question is,"How do we get those jobs."
Remember I said before, the brainwashers have been saying all along,"Those jobs are gone forever."
Only an overall look at the foreign manufacturers building cars here tells us that those jobs really can come back to our shores.
Now, to digress a little. You might , by now, be thinking ,"So what." A bunch of blue collars out of work. How does that effect me? Well, it might interest you to know that there are many people who really don't want to start their own business. They don't want to take the risks involved in going into massive debt to start a little business of their own. And there are millions of them out here.
My own father went bankrupt twice and basically struggled all his life to "be independent."
He really couldn't bring himself to work for someone else after WW II. So his family (and he) suffered.
I am not slamming entrepreneurs, they really are great. People who started Apple, Microsoft, Google and Facebook all are great...and they (for the most part) pay their employees well. Unfortunately they are the exception. Hundreds of thousands of small businesses (hiring millions) want the cheapest labor they can get. They don't want to pay benefits, because if an employee gets sick, they simply go find another out of work sucker who will work hard for near starvation wages.
It is really sad when those employers are looked at by the government (and of course the talking heads) as the salvation of America because they do hire people. A lot of those hires are due to turnovers. Does the government really think that starvation wages are a good thing? We are more and more becoming an nation of UNDER-employed people.
By the way unemployment and underemployment lead to many other social ills. Higher stress levels and frustration means more family violence, crimes like robbery and theft, and of course more people turning to drugs out of desperation. Our children are not being supervised because Mom and Dad are both working two jobs trying to maintain what little standard of living they have.
This is not a pretty picture, not to mention the reality and possibility of our welfare/social system breaking down and rioting, anarchy, chaos taking over if our people are hungry AND ANGRY, as mentioned by the Mayor of NYC....or was it the Governor? I forget which.
Woe to America if this happens.
SO it is important that we really really look for a way out of this steep downhill "slippery sloop we have gotten ourselves on.
HERE'S A WORKABLE SOLUTION
I am sorry that for all the brainpower in this country so few people have any real ideas on how to solve the problem. Part of this is that they have also been "brainwashed" by the slogans," Those jobs are gone forever" and "Americans don't really want to work."
It time to take drastic action, It's time to think outside of the box.....and like Obama said at the U.N. general assembly, make the hard choices.
WE have asked American industry repeatedly to bring back jobs. To re-open factories....but they won't do this voluntarily. They are making too much money having the Chinese (and others) work for cheap labor. And even changing EPA regulations isn't going to work.
We have seen that foreign companies can come here, deal with OUR regulations, and still manufacture cars. No, we must have a tremendous change in policy that affects ALL importers, but especially the American corporations that manufacture outside our borders. They have enjoyed having their corporate offices in this great country with good roads, good electricity, clean water, basically great infrastructure, while paying themselves huge salaries.
Obama (or our next President, if he loses) must (notice I said MUST!) announce that we are in an National Economic Emergency, thereby giving him (the President) the temporary powers to change policy.
By the way, policy change is cheap. Not a lot of tax dollars are required to change policy.
He must require that ALL imports have 50% manufacture here in the U.S. by American workers. This isn't going to stop us doing business with other countries. It isn't isolationism.
AND it will work....just look at BMW, Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, etc. etc. They have made it work.
I know this will cause a huge outcry from all those companies that have for years closed factories, put Americans out of work, but it has to be done. Too few decent jobs mean too few Americans can purchase the stuff we import....that in itself should get their attention.
The benefits are obvious. New construction of new factories, rehab. of old factories will give a huge boost to the construction industry. This alone will employ many thousands of Americans for the many years into the future. As factories open, millions of Americans will find reasonable jobs, at reasonable wages and benefits. As these people collect their wages they will also pay taxes in to the system....instead of collecting unemployment (or other social benefits such as welfare.)
They will start to buy homes again, boosting our crushed real estate market. Banks will have confidence to loan money again since jobs are plentiful and risk to lenders is lowered.
Once again, the American dream will become a possibility, not just a nightmare.
Of course there will be the nay-sayers. But as this new policy begins to succeed they will fade away. Well, maybe not all the nay-sayers. Some people make a living being nay-sayers. For them, I hope they can find work in some nice food service industry, perhaps McDonald's.
Will there be fries with that B.S.? I can only hope..
Last of all, we need to stop lying to the American people. Our politicians have rigged the statistics of inflation and unemployment so that we do not get a true picture. If we did we would all be much more upset than we are now. We need to take the borrowing of government out of huge funds like Social Security. This is the safety net that so many Americans are depending on, since, after all they work for so many small businesses that pay no benefits like retirement or healthcare Ins., and if they had no Social Security we'd soon be swamped with welfare (which is directly supported by our tax dollars. At least Social Security has had people paying into that system. Oh, and by the way, we should stop putting a limit on how much S.S. taxes we collect. If someone makes $200,000 per year, they should pay S.S. on the entire amount. Now, I think it's capped at a little over $100,000 of income per years. This change would in the long run make a huge difference in the solvency of this system. And of course, we can't allow some groups (like the Postal Service and Congress for example) not to pay into the system.
I welcome anyone's comments....and suggestions. There must be at least a few thousand other ideas on how to save our economy.
Thanks for listening.
HSD