Sir Vices wrote:
Rigged for Hillary wrote:
The BS is strong in this one ^
Don't have time to walk through all of your nonsense. But maybe you can get started by taking a look:
https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CES3000000001Looks to me like there has been a very steady increase in manufacturing jobs ever since the end of the Great Recession. No discernible difference between early 2010 through 2016 (Obama) and 2017 through early 2018 (Trump).
Looks to me like your showing just a blip in a short timeline. That graph from BLS shows data from 2008-2018. How about you show the massive decrease from 1979 through today. Huh? Try again.
These are the facts:
"Manufacturing jobs peaked in 1979 at 19.4 million, according to the Bureau of Labor statistics, and by 1987 had fallen to 17.6 million. What had been a slow decline in employment accelerated after the turn of the century, and especially during the Great Recession. Manufacturing payrolls bottomed out at fewer than 11.5 million in early 2010, and even though more than 900,000 manufacturing jobs have been added since, overall employment in manufacturing is still at its lowest level since before the U.S. entered World War II."
So know you now disagree with Obama after he said "manufacturing jobs are never coming back."
/quote]
American DO NOT want to work in low-paying manufacturing jobs. Who do you think wants those jobs? . . . Hey, I know—immigrants. . . . Maybe you want to force all US citizen minorities to quit "white" jobs and go to work manufacturing things for white enjoyment. The manufacturing slaves need to come from somewhere. Wages must be kept low for manufacturing workers so that whites can lead the good life.
Rigged needs to stop with this manufacturing nonsense. I consult for manufacturing companies and have worked in the business side of manufacturing for over 20 years, and I can tell you he doesn't know what he's talking about just spewing some stats he found that support his view. Fact is that right now there are tons of unfilled manufacturing jobs in the US because there aren't enough skilled Americans to fill them. People think of manufacturing as unskilled labor, but most of those jobs are highly skilled. You need to know how to use ERP software and potentially many other kinds of software and hardware, many jobs require APICS certification, etc.
I predicted this inability to find qualified workers for manufacturing jobs back when we were in the Great Recession. It has come to pass.
Bottom line...the US doesn't need more manufacturing jobs. We currently need more manufacturing workers. DESPITE Trump in office, the unemployment rate is super low...creating more jobs isn't the deal right now. Many manufacturing companies have had to resort to historically high levels of H-1B visas to get the workers they need.