Economy Commerce Secretary Lutnick: You, your kids, and your grandkids will be working at the factory

I didn't know you were an admirer of the Soviet Union. This is a line straight out of their system's playbook.

They declared "unskilled" people are always going to exist. So the state determined if people were unskilled or not and kept them confined to jobs with baseline quotas. History displayed to us that it was problematic for various reasons but I'll digress.

*yawn* Save the Russia bullshit. Its worn out. If you'd like to point out what I said thats incorrect, have at it.
 
what am i missing here? are democrats really ideologically opposed to good paying jobs in factories for american citizens? or is it that they/we think that it will not be for good pay? do we really want to outsource all labor jobs and do we really think all people would be happier if we did?
 
I'm starting strength training with my daughters so they can become floor supervisors and get those $10 extra for the company store!

But seriously it's so sad it almost becomes funny that elected leaders want us to go back to the early 19th century.
Their contempt for the working class isn't even subtle anymore, yet all they have to do is make vague promises of great jobs and screech about wokeness and voila, bunch of working people voting for them.
 
I didn't know you were an admirer of the Soviet Union. This is a line straight out of their system's playbook.

They declared "unskilled" people are always going to exist. So the state determined if people were unskilled or not and kept them confined to jobs with baseline quotas. History displayed to us that it was problematic for various reasons but I'll digress.

I didn't hear anything about unskilled in the clip. The interview was conducted at TSMC here in AZ, which manufactures the most capital-intensive and complex devices on the entire planet. Nobody who works there is unskilled, not even the entry-level process technicians.

So what's the alternative, not creating jobs? Nobody is forcing anyone to work there.
what am i missing here? are democrats really ideologically opposed to good paying jobs in factories for american citizens? or is it that they/we think that it will not be for good pay? do we really want to outsource all labor jobs and do we really think all people would be happier if we did?

I guess this is a bad thing? Yikes.



This is also what he was referring to. I've almost lost count on the number of bids I've put in over the last seven years to build these factories and warehouses; it's been nothing short of a rocket into upper middle class status. By all means, Arizona will gladly become the nation's capital of advanced manufacturing and continue picking up what the rest of the country finds undesirable, lolz.







 
I didn't hear anything about unskilled in the clip. The interview was conducted at TSMC here in AZ, which manufactures the most capital-intensive and complex devices on the entire planet. Nobody who works there is unskilled, not even the entry-level process technicians.




I guess this is a bad thing? Yikes.



This is also what he was referring to. I've almost lost count on the number of bids I've put in over the last seven years to build these factories and warehouses; it's been nothing short of a rocket into upper middle class status. By all means, Arizona will gladly become the nation's capital of advanced manufacturing and continue picking up what the rest of the country finds undesirable, lolz.







so why do the democrats hate this so much man?
 
Study up on the Curtis Yarvin vision of the US, if you havent already. It's a wonderful, heartwarming, endearing landscape of Technocratic CEO overlords each with their own territory, complete with an underclass of laborers born into serfdom. And of course, just to put a cherry on top, the CEO's are all from the same racial demographic.

Sounds awesome. I'm sure they will let you wear those stupid bandanas of yours under your hard hat.
 
I didn't hear anything about unskilled in the clip. The interview was conducted at TSMC here in AZ, which manufactures the most capital-intensive and complex devices on the entire planet. Nobody who works there is unskilled, not even the entry-level process technicians.




I guess this is a bad thing? Yikes.



This is also what he was referring to. I've almost lost count on the number of bids I've put in over the last seven years to build these factories and warehouses; it's been nothing short of a rocket into upper middle class status. By all means, Arizona will gladly become the nation's capital of advanced manufacturing and continue picking up what the rest of the country finds undesirable, lolz.








Bro Arizona will be bone dry before it becomes some industrial utopia. Cant manufacture rain, and given how hostile the base is to science, even if you proposed cloud-seeding they're likely to lose their minds.
 
The guy that magically knew to take the morning off with his kids on 9/11 might be able to tell the future. You guys should listen. :D

His brother died in the Twin Towers so if you're saying he knew but didn't also give his bro a heads up, that's quite a claim to make...
 
Bro Arizona will be bone dry before it becomes some industrial utopia. Cant manufacture rain, and given how hostile the base is to science, even if you proposed cloud-seeding they're likely to lose their minds.

I reckon we'll be alright.


Water is a precious resource in Arizona, and stewardship has been a priority since before statehood. From canal and dam construction in the late 1800s and early 1900s, Colorado River treaties and compacts with neighboring states and Mexico preempting the Colorado River Basin Project Act in 1968 to the 1980 Groundwater Management Act, Arizona’s growth in the 20th century was centered around intentional, proactive water management.

Arizona uses roughly the same amount of water today as it did in the 1950s despite a 7x increase in population and 15x economic increase thanks to increased conservation methods and reduced agriculture demand. Regional leaders recognize the challenges of planning for a resilient water future, and with innovation and more than $5 billion in funding available at the state and federal levels, Arizona is actively advancing its efforts for conservation, distribution and augmentation to address future water needs.


 
Ain’t happening . Very few will be needed in these “ factories .” Robotic AI will be the norm very soon. So good luck being a sex Slave /nude gladiator fighting lions, bears and robots in a giant Octagon. If you’re lucky.
 
I reckon we'll be alright.


Water is a precious resource in Arizona, and stewardship has been a priority since before statehood. From canal and dam construction in the late 1800s and early 1900s, Colorado River treaties and compacts with neighboring states and Mexico preempting the Colorado River Basin Project Act in 1968 to the 1980 Groundwater Management Act, Arizona’s growth in the 20th century was centered around intentional, proactive water management.

Arizona uses roughly the same amount of water today as it did in the 1950s despite a 7x increase in population and 15x economic increase thanks to increased conservation methods and reduced agriculture demand. Regional leaders recognize the challenges of planning for a resilient water future, and with innovation and more than $5 billion in funding available at the state and federal levels, Arizona is actively advancing its efforts for conservation, distribution and augmentation to address future water needs.



UPW recycling and manufacturing...another slave scam with their next gen technology jobs and paychecks.
 
I didn't hear anything about unskilled in the clip. The interview was conducted at TSMC here in AZ, which manufactures the most capital-intensive and complex devices on the entire planet. Nobody who works there is unskilled, not even the entry-level process technicians.




I guess this is a bad thing? Yikes.



This is also what he was referring to. I've almost lost count on the number of bids I've put in over the last seven years to build these factories and warehouses; it's been nothing short of a rocket into upper middle class status. By all means, Arizona will gladly become the nation's capital of advanced manufacturing and continue picking up what the rest of the country finds undesirable, lolz.







Thanks Biden
 
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