Snobdds
Super Member
Yea GE never made or owned Skilsaw. It was owned solely by Skilsaw until 1991 when Bosch entered into a partnership and eventually took over in 1996.
Skilsaw - Wikipedia
Skilsaw - Wikipedia
I was in my grandparents attic looking at magazines from the 20's and 30's. Seems it was a Popular Mechanics... GE had a large ad in it showing there 7.25" skill saws they offered for just 79.99!! direct from them and they also offered a nice trade-in if you sent them the current 7.25 saw you used.. I was shocked by the amount these GE made saws cost back then! What would these cost us today?
Yeah, and the carpenter that bought that probably wasn't in debt. Ford apparently was instrumental in starting the whole "pay later" ball rolling!
You are absolutely right, but you're barking up the wrong tree. Try to get that through to all the politicians of both major political parties on all levels of government, from the local level on up to the federal level.Yeah. Debt is a dangerous thing if it's not carefully managed. Much more so for governments, IMO.
So where does the tariff money go? This extra money that we are paying because there is a tariff on part/all of the item? It goes directly into the Treasury. Let's call it what it really is...a TAX.
Oh and trade prevents war. It just does.
Inexpensive tools helped me build a successful career building things here in America. If we had gone isolationist in the 70s and 80s I would not have been able to build a construction business. I wouldn't own a tractor now and I wouldn't be blessed to be here discussing it on a computer built from parts and materials from almost 60 countries that was made by the most successful company in America. We have tried isolationism and trade wars. We have always lost and gone back to trading with our neighbors.
I could be a survivalist and do grow and create everything I need to survive but my quality of life will plummet and I will have to do many things I am not suited to. I would rather do what I'm good at and trade with others. The same goes for my views on a national stage.
Oh and trade prevents war. It just does.
trade has been enabling war, no money, no war!.. (meaning the other Country, actually 2).. we can do fine depending on ourselves, just like we have before..Inexpensive tools helped me build a successful career building things here in America. If we had gone isolationist in the 70s and 80s I would not have been able to build a construction business. I wouldn't own a tractor now and I wouldn't be blessed to be here discussing it on a computer built from parts and materials from almost 60 countries that was made by the most successful company in America. We have tried isolationism and trade wars. We have always lost and gone back to trading with our neighbors.
I could be a survivalist and do grow and create everything I need to survive but my quality of life will plummet and I will have to do many things I am not suited to. I would rather do what I'm good at and trade with others. The same goes for my views on a national stage.
Oh and trade prevents war. It just does.
Tariffs are not the end game, free fair trade is. Tariffs are used to change behavior.
Let us compete fairly on world markets and you will see US grow and innovate.
we need to cut off those Countries that are using our money to prepare for war with us, though(2).. there are many other Countries we can deal with!..That may be the intention, but the actual effect is to destroy US manufacturing jobs. 200K Americans lost their jobs due to higher production costs last time around with no lasting improvement for the US steel industry workers. And here we are doing the same thing to try to fix the same problem but somehow expecting a different outcome. Insanity.
US production does grow and innovate when allowed to compete fairly in world markets; tariffs make fair competition impossible because they burden US manufacturers with arbitrarily higher production costs than the rest of the world.
Nice post, Fastowl. Thanks for your insight.Folks. I own a consulting firm that my partner and I have had for the last 20 years. A tiny piece is to look at the domestic steel industry as a gauge of the economy as well as a marker for natural gas consumption. Anyway for the past 2-3 months the US mills are running at or near the top of the utilization rate for U.S. mills over the past decade. Overall capacity utilization is now near 80% of nameplate capacity vs 73-75% a year ago. The US mills are turning out about 150,000 tons more per week compared to a year ago. China produces about 50% of total world steel production; the US in recent years about 5%. This issue doesn't turn around overnight; it took many years to get so messed up, it will take quite some time to reverse itself in any meaningful way. But with US steel production up 5-8% from a year ago we are going in the right direction. Be patient; slow progress is happening.
In 1990 the U.S. produced 50+% more steel than the Chinese; in 2000 they passed us and were producing about 15-20% more than we do. By 2017 they were producing 10 times the steel that the U.S. does. With no unions; no real labor laws; little or no pollution laws, etc. what do you think would happen? The only way to compete once you get the rules fixed is to be smarter and more productive. But you have to get rid of the predatory pricing.