BigBallinStalin wrote:I have yet to encounter data which states that international trade has lead to a steady decline in wages. Perhaps you could provide a source? You only mention the negatives of the expansion of international trade, so why not I mention the positives:
Try using google. Literally typing "NAFTA destroyed industry" will hit hundreds of articles. Rule #1 is "Never ask a question in a debate if you don't already know the answer."
Big Businesses benefit most from NAFTA. What they've done is start setting up shop in Mexico along the border so they can manufacture things using legal and cheap Mexican labor and then just ship it North to the States.
In addition, it benefits agribusiness because they flood Mexico with farm products and Mexican farmers just can't compete with the low prices and are forced out of the Market.
It gives US citizens cheap stuff and Mexicans cheap stuff, but the result is less jobs in the States (but they would have went to Asia anyway) and hard conditions for Mexicans who used to be farm workers. These Mexicans move North to find jobs in the factories or cross into the US illegally.
*Edit*
Mexico suggested NAFTA, so don't blame the US.
BigBallinStalin wrote:2) external competition. If you want to limit the power of monopolies, you have to enable competition; otherwise, your dreaded Mansato corporation--which you inadvertently support through supporting tariffs and discouraging international trade--retains a huge market share and control over the production of certain goods. Foreign competitors can reduce Mansato's grip on the market, thus enabling more options for consumers to purchase certain goods. However, there's also regulations involved by the government, which further complicates the issue (in other words, it's not as simple as you think).
If you want to limited the power of Monopolies:
TEDDY MOTHERFUCKING ROOSEVELT! Tariffs aren't the problem. The problem is that consumers don't care where their goods come from, and the government is run by Agri-Business board members and lawyers. Monsanto has reached a point where it has money to burn on lobbying and suing.
BigBallinStalin wrote:A decrease in real wages (over whichever time you want to specify) are not only due to international trade, which you just stated.
No I didn't. In fact when I said "And if everyone bought locally, instead of from these same 10 corporations" I was talking about the American meat production monopolies.
BigBallinStalin wrote:It has, but other factors have also led to this like minimum wage, unions lobbying for higher wages, high corporate taxes (US is #1 in the world, maybe #2 currently), an unstable political and/or economic environment, et cetera. The problem that you're not understanding is that this is a very complex issue. It's not as simple as you declare it to be.
So? It's only as complex as you want it to be. The problem at the heart of it is this: NAFTA closed down many American production and service businesses/industries. So the answer is to stop doing it...
So it really is simple. We don't need to spend the next 11 hours analyzing every facet. It has a negative impact so we stop it.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Besides, one long-term benefit of shifting American production and service jobs to overseas is that it frees up labor for more valued uses. In the long-term, Juan. The problem with your focus on the short-term is that you overlook future benefits and ignore unintended consequences. Nevertheless, with freed up labor for higher valued uses, this enables people in college to see which fields are profitable and which are on the decline. It enables people to understand which sector will become more profitable, which areas businesses will grow, and which ones will decline.
Riiiiight.... that does not pass the smell test. 4.9 million Americans need to be out of work and on the Dole right now in order for college kids to better choose which career choice will make them the most amount of money, in the future at an undisclosed date. Until then they can be out of work too. And it also helps all these 4.9 million Americans out because they could go to work at any time....
BigBallinStalin wrote:Judging from your above response, you only mentioned negatives about international trade (well, actually, only one, which was overly simplistic by ignoring other factors). From your limited view on international trade (since you view intl. trade as a zero-sum game), you erroneously conclude that it's bad. It's not always bad, and it varies. There are many benefits and many costs, but you only focus on one or two particular negatives, while completely ignoring the benefits.
No. It's bad when it costs Americans jobs and wages. And when it leads to health risks or environmental concerns. The same as the Agri-Business monopolies. I'm simply speaking in generalities, but that is the zero-sum game. I cannot for the life of me understand the logic behind "freeing up the labor force" by sending all of our jobs overseas or over borders. You're simply hoping that a new industry will gobble up the idle workforce. You have no plan whatsoever. I don't care how complex you feel that it is, A bird in the hand is better than two in the bush.
BigBallinStalin wrote:The point is that buying immediately local doesn't necessarily support even your national economy. By purchasing from an immediate/local business "A", you don't purchase from some other American company that is considered to be as "local" as business A. For example, your hardware store (can't recall the name something & something's) is a "local" business in that it has operations over several regions of the US (predominantly the Midwest). When you purchase from there, you don't purchase from other "local" business, which means that by buying locally, you aren't necessarily supporting the national economy. That's all I'm pointing out (and it's in relation to your "buy American, it helps Americans" stance).
That doesn't make any sense. I can't buy from every local business in the history of America. The two businesses in your scenario are equal, so it doesn't matter where I spend that money. I don't have to buy from both of them. & I don't see how the need to support the national economy has grown from that issue.
BigBallinStalin wrote:If you understand that business A example, then you can understand that there are unintended consequences with your actions. By purchasing from American local business A, another local American business doesn't make the sale, thus hurting their performance (to a minor degree). (This is a point I've been stressing but you seem to ignore because you never concede on anything; you just forget, which is unfortunate.)
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=131709&start=135#p3148520 (in reference to the underlined)
But again, if they are completely identical, then it doesn't matter whatsoever. I wouldn't say that it is an unintended consequence, because I am fully aware that spending my money at one place will help it's performance over it's competitors. That's why I shop American in the first place.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Good for you, sir. It's hard to tell when you shift your stance from this one:
As I said I buy locally and expand that outward. And I also said that I always try to buy American first.
The best thing to do, is to buy American, and to buy in season. The plant will taste better, it will be more likely to be natural, and it'll help out Americans.
There is absolutely no shift at all. How do you say that?
BigBallinStalin wrote:Thank you, JB, for limiting your earlier argument that "buying locally DOES guarantee that the money will be spent within the local market" to your current one, which admits that "where they go from there is out of my control."
Just because you don't follow me, does not make me a liar. My earlier statement was just as limited. Here they are side by side, to show how remarkably similar they are. All I did differently the second time was finish my train of thought for you, to make sure we had an understanding. THis shouldn't even be an issue.
No it doesn't. But it does guarantee that my money is spent in my community. Which is why I do it.
I don't think that you follow me. If I spend my dollars in my community; well then I just spent them in my community. I'm guaranteeing that they are spent there. Yes, Where they go from there is out of my control.... So that was my argument.
BigBallinStalin wrote:"Can you find a better rule?" implies that what you stated was your rule to live by. You forgot that you held two contradictory stances at the same time, which is why it is important to concede on certain issues, JB, instead of digging in your heels.
I have dug in my heels, but I haven't held contradictory stances. No one else believes that I have. You've been trying to peg my beliefs as being ignorant for a while, but I haven't had a problem arguing a point over one of yours yet. Yours are too broad and general to handle the specifics of this debate, I think. You've expanded the debate from being one about eating healthy, locally grown food products VS eating the agri-business monopolies foods into one about supporting international trade.
And as far as I'm concerned, you didn't find a better rule.
BigBallinStalin wrote:My contention in this response is this: Exchange (i.e. trade) is not a zero-sum game. People mutually benefit ex ante with each exchange; otherwise, they would not trade. You posit that international trade is bad for the US economy, and you focus on the negatives, but your conclusion overlooks the benefits (as I've mentioned above). Can you reasonably presume that your standpoint is correct if you are unaware of the most of the benefits of international trade?
Are you open to expanding your mind with a book (or some good internet articles) that explain my position in more detail?
While I agree that international free trade has it's benefits to industry, and to the individual, I do not agree that it has been wholly positive for the country. I do not believe that the positives of free trade outweigh the negatives. And not just for people, but for the planet as well. I'm not saying that we should have to buy American products at an outrageous price, but rather we should be protecting our businesses and industry.
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Here was your nationalist stance:

I don't care if you call me a nationalist. I feel that the very fact that you can call me a nationalist while debating with me shows that maybe there are some freedoms in this country that I can be proud of. If you were born in North Korea (purely by chance) your views would entirely different - they'd be ideological and nationalist. So yeah, I don't mind being called a nationalist anymore than a North Korean does, but for a different reason.
BigBallinStalin wrote:The reason why American companies are more reasonable than your view is that they are open to buying foreign goods in order to conduct their business more efficiently at a lower cost. If they can decrease their costs by increasing their productivity and/or efficiency (thus increasing their profits), then they can remain in the US and pay their workers a decent wage.
I pretty much completely disagree with this. I showed you how it's a myth that a company whose profits increase will share it with it's employees. American productivity has been on the rise for 40 years, but our wages have not.
BigBallinStalin wrote:[In reference to the underline]: You aren't necessarily helping support American workers by buying only "American" final goods.
Yes I am. I know that at least one American worker was involved in the final assembly, right? That was what the part that you underlined was about.
BigBallinStalin wrote:If "Japanese" cars are manufactured in the USA and support American workers, then what harm have you caused by purchasing a "foreign" car?
Because in the end, my money supports the Japanese economy.
BigBallinStalin wrote:One thing: there's room for competitors if they're savvy enough to capture a market share which dislikes Tyson and Purdue products enough to buy locally produced products.
They may "suffocate the market," but their standardized strategies leave gaps in the market. Differentiated strategies which customize their products to suit certain customers' needs can close these gaps. My point is that there still can be room for competition.
That role is filled by the few local farmers who still sell their foodstuffs at farmers markets. There is no other gaps, which is what I've been complaining about. They control everything from the farmer who raises the animals, to the farmer who produces feed, to the slaughterhouses.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Perhaps, you meant "cartel."
No I meant Monopoly.
BigBallinStalin wrote:instead of reading cherry-picked wikipedia facts that [do]offer much evidence.
You very specifically asked for them.
BigBallinStalin wrote:My point, JB, is that if you do not possess the economic information (which can include environmental impact) of the standpoint which you advocated:
"The best thing to do, is to buy American, and to buy in season. The plant will taste better, it will be more likely to be natural, and it'll help out Americans."
Then you can not reasonably infer that you know what is best for everyone. Because without economic information, you can't assess which sectors of the economy are affected (which in turn means which people are affected). Your data said that "antibiotics are bad" and "E.Coli causes harm" but most of them didn't leave any quantifiable data, which is why a professor of the agricultural field would give you a funny. Some of the data indicated that it's bad to purchase from certain corporations, but that doesn't rule out that other large corporations are bad. The data didn't support your point that "we should buy American because buying American helps" either. I'm interesting in reading more factual articles and books that pertain to these issues, instead of reading cherry-picked wikipedia facts that don't offer much evidence.
Anyway though, I don't know for certain that I have a photographic memory, but I do know that you don't. You've taken my words out of context. Clearly I allow for other people's personal data to be input into my statement. Here is the original context that you've forgotten:
Juan_Bottom wrote:Timminz wrote:If people really want a specific product, and no substitute good will do, of course they should buy the import (as long as the price is at or below their willingness to pay).
Well that goes without saying. But don't listen to BBS because he works for Monsanto. Or Tyson. I don't know yet. But either way, please don't sue me for encouraging people not to eat your products or to contribute to your control of 90% or 80% of your food industry. Depending on if you are Monsanto or Tyson's boy.The best thing to do, is to buy American, and to buy in season. The plant will taste better, it will be more likely to be natural, and it'll help out Americans.
Ignore the strikethrough part. I just didn't want to hear anyone crying foul. Anyway though, I was right. Once again, I was speaking in generalities.
BigBallinStalin wrote:If everyone did it, then you harm other sectors of the economy that rely on foreign trade. You make people lose jobs, Juan. How can you call yourself a caring American by advocating such a stance?
The question is does the job growth equal or surpass the jobs lost. It's obvious that the growth would equal or surpass the jobs lost. Instead of sending X amount of dollars overseas you send most of it back into our economy.
BigBallinStalin wrote:And when you say something like "It would be best for everyone else, if everyone did it," you presume that based on your limited knowledge, judgment, and wisdom, that you still know what is best for everyone else. And I already explained how that isn't a good idea, yet you still advocate that it should be done... [facepalm.jpg]
And I've explained how it so obviously is.
Despite paying higher prices (which I would say is an obvious outcome to many) if every American bought only American products then those American businesses that sell and/or create those products would have to hire workers.
American workers. So instead of having that 4.9 million unemployed, the number would be cut down drastically. And that is exactly what I'm saying would be best for America. Your system of letting the individual do what is best only for the individual has lead to a shift in manufacturing/production and servicing jobs overseas at a faster rate than we can replace them. You're not truly diminishing your own income when you are simultaneously ensuring a healthy job market and economy.
I could swear that there was a famous mathematician or economics teacher who proved that free trade isn't the best system. The best system is when everyone works together to make sure that they all get a bigger piece. I couldn't find it on Google but I will.
That's what I'm talking about when I say "It would be best for everyone else, if everyone did it."
BigBallinStalin wrote:You're a dishonest debater. You intentionally removed the remainder to my point. That's why it's important to not interrupt so frequently because you miss the point:
I removed it because it had nothing to do with my point that you quoted. I don't feel a need to debate every little quibble and expand this until each response is 10 pages long.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Why won't you concede on even some basic points I raise? Instead, you just ignore them, no matter how reasonable they are. To me that's called being intellectually dishonest. If you continue to pull these tactics, then I won't have much to gain from this discussion, because you are not genuinely interested in being open-minded to differing views.
I ignore points for one of three reasons.
It has nothing to do with my points that you disagree with
I've already covered it (be it indirectly or directly)
Or I agree and there's no conflict.
In this case it's the second one.
BigBallinStalin wrote:You didn't counter that. You sidestepped with "You know who else they used to price out of a job? Illegal Immigrants." And minimum wage, according to you, prices illegal immigrants out of a job, then I say, "Darn those unintended consequences at the expense of nationalist sentiments!" (Your nationalist sentiments describe your implied joy in having illegal immigrants priced out of job).
Minimum wage didn't price the immigrants out; it was the Unions forcing them out. If you look at slaughterhouses today (for example) what once were good-paying union jobs for Americans have become dangerous, low paying jobs for illegals. Because while you're arguing free trade for the masses, to me the heart of the issue is Agri-business.
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Quoting out of context is stupid.
Did I not answer your questions? Irregardless of how I quoted you, I answered what you were trying to ask. So duh!
BigBallinStalin wrote:"Productivity has been on the rise for quite a while while wages have been on the decline."
Your empirically support statement doesn't show how "The upper bound is increased through one's labor productivity, which is from one's own labor, and from technological advances in increased productivity per laborer." is a myth.

You wasted all that time, and then act all macho about failing to explain what I was saying earlier was a myth.
Yes it does. It shows that no matter how hard we work or how much we produce our wages have a cap. I was thinking about this today and figured that this was the argument to be lobbed back at me. But clearly you can't work harder and learn more and keep earning more money. Sooner or later you have to flat line. Instead of sharing, business keeps the additional profits from your work for itself. There can be no other explanation for American productivity to rise since 1975 but for our wages to stay the same. You may be talking about "real income" again because we produce more now than in '75, so everything's a bit cheaper. But our wages haven't increased.
Then again, isn't '75 when Union power nationwide peaked?
BigBallinStalin wrote:Here's a fun read about Unions:
You keep telling me to prove this and that, yet whoever wrote that article did not show their work, and are at odds with most historians. That's too much contradiction to take at their word. American history, particularly from the years of 1770 through 1920 is something of a hobby for me.
Their article also flys in the face of everything that has happened to American business since 1950, when both unions and protectionists laws began eroding. For instance they say that Capitalism, not unions was what lead to a safer work environment. But that is the dumbest point you have ever made. Over and over again we have seen businesses cut corners with safety in order to increase profits. In fact, in this very thread I have repeatedly brought up how the unions made slaughterhouses safer for their workers, only for the job to once again become one of the most dangerous in America... because of the loss of the unions and government protection.
I think that any amateur historian could go through that with a pair of scissors. I would myself because I love the history of this time period, but there's too much to cover in your post.
BigBallinStalin wrote:How much childish can you get, Juan? Your own reasoning doesn't support the information you presented, and you claim that you are right? It's not as simple as you think it is; therefore, (as I was originally stating) you can't use your one case to justify that you know what is best for everyone when you say things like:
But in my original context, I was right. You expanded the argument into a direction that I originally had no intention of taking it. I very clearly wasn't telling everyone in the world to do exactly as I do, I was speaking in generalities based on common sense.
BigBallinStalin wrote:JB, I'm asking about how that study was conducted because it's important to understand how statistics are calculated. Apparently, you can't answer my questions because you don't understand how they obtained those numbers; therefore, it is pointless for me to ask you about something you don't fully understand.
It seemed rhetorical to me.
BigBallinStalin wrote:How can I be wrong about something I didn't state contradictory evidence to?
I didn't say that you did. I just said that you said that I was twice as right.
Juan_Bottom wrote:I'll continue to buy locally until there's no where left to buy from.
BigBallinStalin wrote:You're still dictating what's best for others.
Juan_Bottom wrote:What are you, slow or something? I said "I'll do this" not "I'll make everyone do this."
BigBallinStalin wrote:Oh but you did. You just forget or you're a liar.

dude what? how? If you're going to call someone a liar, at least have the common decency to quote their lies instead of something random.
BigBallinStalin wrote:He died. Got anything else? Just kidding.
Radio talk shows are great, but they have limited depth compared to books (which may explain how you construct your arguments, how you defend your points, and how you feel no need to present data on economics (which can include environmental information) in order to support your stance that:
What it comes down to is this. I don't see any point in trading books in order to win a casual debate in an internet forum on a game site. And I also think that to suggest so is both elitist and retarded at the same time. Besides this, I'm too busy reading the thesaurus now.
BigBallinStalin wrote:I'm not saying the effects of E.Coli are isolated. It is foolish to suggest one case (or even a few), which don't mention any economics (hardly any have any numbers at all), support your opinions, and then say, "this is best for the economy. DERP."
And once again, you're being intellectually dishonest:
AHHHHhhhhhhhhh, no. You're forgetting that I was also arguing the health benefits of not eating meat from the big ten. So obviously I was not arguing about the economy (though the subjects touch). I was arguing the health benefit's of not eating poisoned meat. Be careful when you throw out phrases like "intellectually dishonest" because to me, the debate is an art form. Everything has a place and everything is in it's place. That's why I speak in generalities so you can pin me to many specifically applied ideals.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Your environmental impact assessment largely lacks quantifiable data and has hardly any (if at all) data related to the economics of decided to follow your advice (namely expressed in your two standpoints:
Which? I've only mentioned environmental impacts in passing, except for when you asked. So I haven't talked about that.
Now if you mean the release of E.Coli and Salmonella into the wild, that's different. I don't know how either has effected nature on the whole but I do know that the Salmonella can contaminate spinach, onions, lettuce,... and it has. And it's sickened American consumers that way. And that's the meat industry's fault. But the E.Coli would be almost negligible if you eat grass-fed beef.
But besides that point, what kind of sick world are we living in when a man will take the opinion that he needs to know how free trade economics are effected before he can asses whether the resulting damage to nature is acceptable? That reminds me of those asshole loggers that want the right to cut down 500+ year-old trees.
BigBallinStalin wrote:I looked at the bits you summarized and they don't mention enough information for me to jump on your "buy American" or "if everyone bought American, then it would best" because there's hardly information that relates to the economic impact (you know, the economy, and how everyone is affected by it?).
Well we know what happened when we shifted our jobs overseas and became a consumer economy. Seems to me that you can make reasonable assumptions with the either half of the data.
BigBallinStalin wrote:As I said earlier, you have no empirical data listed. It's just broad statements. And in spirit of this discussion, if you don't have empirical data
Ah, you smugly asked for a list of environmental concerns. I gave you the list, and then you said that using wiki wasn't good enough. ECT, and you ended with this statement which is so far removed from the reality of the conversation.... It just doesn't make sense. There's no need to be a smug jerkwad because wiki isn't empirical or something.
BigBallinStalin wrote:[Thanks for answering my question on globalization, but you forgot something]
I thought that I did. Obviously I covered the Monsanto tariffs bit, and at some point I thought you believed the cheap grain to India and China canceled out the fact that it also put many poor farmers/sharecroppers out of business.
BigBallinStalin wrote:
All of their farms? All of them? Oh jeez, I would love to read about how all of Mexico's farms were killed by removing import tariffs. (Only import tariffs, right, Juan? Because that's what you're positing). I'll patiently await this information.
I love how you latch onto a single idea or phrase that makes you believe you have found a major hole in my argument. You're unintentionally turning the argument into one about my use of the English language.
What I said was:
"No, there I was talking about how free trade (NAFTA) abolished the protection tariffs that Mexico had and killed all their farms. It must have hurt Canadian farms too, I'm certain."
AND killed all their farms
not
and that killed all of their farmsNAFTA’s Disastrous Results
The results of NAFTA have made things even worse for the people of Mexico. From 1994-2004 (according to World Bank figures), 6 million campesinos, or one-quarter of the rural population, was ruined and had to leave the countryside to try to survive. In Mexico, only one third of new job seekers entering the employment market will find a job. Emigration increased exponentially and has reached the level of 600,000 people per year who risk their lives to cross the border into the U.S. Every year more people die. Last year, 562 people died in the desert, or in other ways, crossing the border.
As Mexican President Felipe Calderón dined with foreign dignitaries on traditional Mexican country delicacies like pumpkin-flower soup, he trumpeted the “benefits” of NAFTA. Despite what he called “inconveniences,” the U.S. and Canada now buy five times more from Mexican agribusiness than they bought in 1994.
NAFTA intensified the competitive disadvantages facing Mexican farmers. It mandated that the Mexican government drastically cut farm subsidies to small farmers, while U.S. producers receive the equivalent of $10 billion in subsidies per year. And, on top of all this, the Mexican government pays subsidies to U.S. agribusiness giant Cargill for the transportation and distribution of corn.
In addition to ruining farmers, these changes have imposed more hunger on the Mexican people. Since NAFTA went into effect, Mexico has had to import the majority of its food. Speculation in corn prices has led to a rise in tortilla prices of 730%. In a concentrated expression of the oppressor/oppressed relationship between the U.S. and Mexico, the amount spent on food imports by Mexicans since NAFTA went into effect is about the same amount as what is sent back to Mexico as remittances by former campesinos who have been forced to the U.S. to be superexploited as undocumented immigrants ($100 billion).
While the radical transformations of Mexican agriculture have injected profit into U.S. imperialism and its Mexican junior partners, they have been a disaster for the people. And the new rules that went into effect at the beginning of 2008 will be worse. According to the National Association of Rural Producers (Asociación Nacional de Empresas Comercializadoras del Campo), the imports of corn and beans without any restrictions will cause “an economic and social catastrophe for the majority of producers, insecurity in the food supply, and vulnerability for the security and governability” of the country.
A good portion of these people came over the boarder looking for work. Monford and IBP (& More) have been known to advertise in Mexico for workers to come work in their meat packaging and slaughterhouses.
And still some other farmers switched to cactus farming, though the profits seem to have been less lucrative.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Don't you see the unintended consequences of import tariffs?
I just don't understand why over and over again you think that you're being smart. I answered the question about Monsanto and import tariffs before you even asked it. I know that there is a lot here, but it's your conversation as well as mine, and I'm doing fine following it.