I had a moment of boredom to fill, this was what I was trying to recall.
On a side note, re. the subject of that thread, it appears that the bailout worked. I make no comment as to the quality of the product, but at least one section of American manufacturing is still running today because of government emergency loans. I use loan instead of bailout because it is being payed back (apparently with interest, so the taxpayer is going to make on the deal).
When I was a kid I was told "We do these things not because they're easy, but because they're hard"
Now all I hear is " I won't do anything unless there's something in it for me"
Harley is a special case and I refrain from using them as an exemplar of American tech.
HD builds inferior crap because that's what their customers want, not because they can't do any better.
"I am the one who knocks."- Heisenberg
I'll bemoan the quality of american made products too.
Not everything. You've got as good small businesses and craftsmen as any, but some of the large production factory-made stuff is as bad as crap out of Hong Kong or mainland China (not saying crap is all they make either, mind you).
Err, no.
I wouldn't argue with the rest though, other than to say that putting profits above all else is getting all too common elsewhere, too, sometimes with american influences speeding that up.
But be all that as it may, the fact that Donald Trump gets taken seriously in the political arena by anyone reads like some kind of joke. He's a mentalist. But then again, so is Ron Paul, and half the internets loved him the last time around.
Last edited by Snee; 06-09-2011 at 08:53 PM.
"Researchers have already cast much darkness on the subject, and if they continue their investigations, we shall soon know nothing at all about it."
-Mark Twain
The industrial revolution, my good man. When you say "mass production", and "first" I think of british canneries and the like. Not saying Henry Ford or his conveyor belts weren't brilliant, or owt, though.
Bit of a leap from one to the other, but if that's you want to take from that, why not?Originally Posted by j2k4
On a slightly less vague note, I do think that America's influence on ways of doing business and financial policies around the world is huge. Not everywhere, but enough so it seems that it, as a nation, should take some of the blame for turning the world more towards a more callous kind of capitalism (or capitalism at all)*. Personally, I think that had gotten even more noticeable under Trump. But then again, maybe I'm overestimating what he could have done for or to America and in extension the rest of the world.
*Not that the EU isn't doing its part.
That you would even think to say "turning the world more towards a more callous kind of capitalism...under Trump" is a pretty solid indication of the pervasive type of mis-perception that prevails in your neck of the woods, Snee.
That last part is the worst, though - "under Trump"?
Egad.
"Researchers have already cast much darkness on the subject, and if they continue their investigations, we shall soon know nothing at all about it."
-Mark Twain
SnnySnee is correct Kev. You are looking at the U.S. from the inside. The rest of the world has the opposite view.(nothing like stating the obvious). From my experience 'outsiders' percieve the U.S. the same as many Americans percieve Texans(sorry Skiz
), loud, abrasive, intrusive and railroading at every opportunity. A statement I heard often in my sojourns to your part of the world was. 'You can always tell a Texan, Nothing'.
If you ever wonder why the U.S.(At the moment) is reviled by the rest of the world, the above statement will give you a rough idea.
p.s. I have some friends who are American(Not anymore!.)
The best way to keep a secret:- Tell everyone not to tell anyone.
"Researchers have already cast much darkness on the subject, and if they continue their investigations, we shall soon know nothing at all about it."
-Mark Twain
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