Bethlehem Steel
Posted by Bradleytank 12 years, 4 months ago to Business
As I drive by my old customer Bethlehem Steel... I question who is left in American manufacturing. The fragmented manufacturing and specialization has created a void. A cloud of regulations and tax law have economically engineered an economic storm equilivant to a nuclear winter.
Creation is an act of love.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcEOsGvT0...
All of that is progress what we need is to create about 30 million careers. Jobs are OK, but what we really need is economic ladders for each segment of the population to climb. If everyone that wanted a career could have one and climb up out of the poverty trap, then selfish capitalism would have lifted more people up than LBJ's war on poverty ever has. The political problem with work is that it's delayed gratification rather than the instant thrill of spending your EBT card.
It is a sad state of affairs. It is a scene much like many parts of my neck of the woods around Detroit... they look like something straight out of AS. Soon there will be no industry at all if things aren't changed.
I like your screen name. I have produced many military components, some for the successors of the Bradley Tank...
Respectfully,
O.A.
Once we did this by Revolution, but now they have the guns. We'd lose. So, the only route is by trying to hold things together until we can get ever more "Believers" into Congress and hope we make it in time. Otherwise, we will have lost and can expect to be renamed "The United States of Communism".
Now I do not doubt that the labor costs due to unionization and mismanagement also played a part, but one should not ignore the simple market forces of improved technology on an industry with such a high capital investment cost.
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The expansion on a mountainside had to be creative and differ greatly from a build to suit opportunity of new competitors.
I think the montra my father taught me
Constantly compete with yourself to improve, it will guarantee your competitors the strongest foe.
factories or pipelines? Looking at the EPA Abuse
web site they have done enough damage to our
economy. I'd trust a civil engineer way before an EPA bureaucrat.
bureaucrat
The current generation are coming out of school with shiny specialization degrees, or no degree and no training. A wise professor once defined specialization as, "Knowing more and more about less and less." Pretty much fits. We are no longer a nation of well rounded individuals. One company had 200 openings in their IT business, but could not fill them. Today's computer geeks apparently could not relate to the people they were serving. They knew nothing of the fields for which they would program computers, had limited skills in communication and conversation, and lacked a desire to care about any of it. Customer service is an overlooked factor in the success of a business, and that skill is going down the tubes in this country. Read Amazon customer posts about products - they will not be repeat customers of a brand when they have had a bad customer service experience.Kids have no practical hands on skills today, with the exception of a few vocational schools, leaving them qualified for little more than McDonald's when they graduate.Actually, maybe not even that, as some cannot even mop the floor without laving a lake for customers to fall on.
"The Rise and Fall of the Steel Industry", Wall Street Journal. coaldigger. 1997.
:)
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