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The Downfall of America........

Intel has a lot of well compensated people at the top. Their salaries do not reflect their management abilities.

Christoph Schell. EVP and CCO, SMG. Total Compensation $27,678,800 View details, Pay Rank By Title In MFG Durable industry
Intel's CEO is Pat Gelsinger, appointed in Feb 2021, has a tenure of 3.17 years. total yearly compensation is $11.61M,
As EVP and GM, CCG at INTEL CORP, Michelle Johnston Holthaus made $7,633,900 in total compensation.
Boise April Miller is at least $7.28 Million dollars as of 30 January 2024. Ms Miller owns over 2,723 units of Eaton plc stock worth over $6,157,664 and over the last 8 years she sold ETN stock worth over $0. In addition, she makes $1,126,245 as EVP and Gen. Counsel & Sec. at Eaton plc.
 
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While Yellen is telling the Chinese to cut back on production, America's increase in production is 0%.
Insanity.
Growth in more Government.

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Americans are sitting on their ass and Chinese are working and building similar products cheaper. The US Government wants to charge a tariff on an item that can't be made economically in America. Time to get the Government out of the American manufacturing industry. Government will take the money from a tariff and drop it off in the black hole of Government waste while the consumer pays more. Insamity.

A few ludicrous ideas:

Western governments should subsidize domestic manufacturing — not impose import tariffs​

Summary​


It is difficult to predict precisely how a protective tariff will influence prices and trade flows. It is worth keeping in mind that tariffs may have a spillover effect into other industries, as was the case in 2002 with steel tariffs. In the tire sector, U.S. tariffs resulted in shifting multi-lateral trade volumes and increasing volatility in domestic producer prices.


U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s nearly weeklong visit to China, now underway, will most likely focus on U.S. concerns about Chinese subsidies to producers of electric vehicles and other clean-tech goods. While the availability of cheap EVs is good news for the planet and for consumers everywhere, it is bad news for shareholders and employees of Western car companies, and both the United States and the European Union are considering imposing import tariffs on Chinese EVs. But tariffs are the wrong approach.
EVs are superior to ICE (internal-combustion engine) cars in many ways. They are the world’s best hope for decarbonizing passenger vehicles, short of moving away from cars altogether. They can provide crucial energy-storage capacity for the electric grid, aiding broader decarbonization efforts, which in turn will cut EVs’ carbon footprint further. And their faster acceleration and smoother ride underpinned the early success of Tesla TSLA, -3.63% and other high-end EVs.


 
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“One of the greatest mysteries in Washington, DC is why the Department of Commerce continues to allow U.S. technology to be shipped to Huawei" Republican Congressman Michael Gallagher, who chairs the House of Representatives select committee on China, said in a statement to Reuters.

US lawmakers angry after Huawei unveils laptop with new Intel AI chip​

It’s not accidental. Whenever the US government oversteps against China, the internet of everything will immediately collapse in North America. It’s MAD by another avenue.
 
The US Government paying a foreign company $6.4 BILLION to come to Texas and produce computer chips.
What the hell has happened to our country ?

April 15 (Reuters) - The Biden administration will award up to $6.4 billion in grants to South Korea's Samsung to expand its chip production in central Texas as part of a broader effort to expand U.S. chipmaking, the Department of Commerce said on Monday.
The funding, from the 2022 Chips and Science Act, will boost chip production for the aerospace, defense, and auto industries and bolster national security, administration officials told reporters.

"The return of leading-edge chip manufacturing to America is a major new chapter in our semiconductor industry," said White House National Economic Adviser Lael Brainard.


 
A "tariff" on goods is nothing more than an additional tax on "We the People". No good then, no good now.

The act granted the EIC a monopoly on the sale of tea that was cheaper than smuggled tea; its hidden purpose was to force the colonists to pay a tax of 3 pennies on every pound of tea. The Tea Act thus retained the three pence Townshend duty on tea imported to the colonies.

Biden wants to triple China tariffs on steel, aluminum imports​


 
While Yellen is telling the Chinese to cut back on production, America's increase in production is 0%.
Insanity.
Growth in more Government.

View attachment 8389430


The USA should be tripping over itself to promote a business/regulatory climate conducive for the market to develop mining, agriculture, manufacturing, and heavy industry jobs.

If all we are going to have is an economy of home healthcare nurses, Motel Six managers, travel agents, social workers, and the odd doctor or lawyer in some particular small town, with most young people working as "assistant managers" at a Dollar General, then there won't be much of an economy.

Ultimately all wealth originates from either the Sun or the Earth, if you want to take it back to that level. All energy basically comes from the Sun and all mineral wealth/raw materials come from the ground or below the ground. Industry and agriculture have to be the foundational bedrock upon which the rest of the economy is built and rests. We cannot all do service work and service work cannot be the heart and soul of the economy.


A town of 5,000 people could function with 1,000 people working in manufacturing, 1,000 working in mining, 10 doctors, 5 dentists, 4 lawyers, 3 accountants, and so forth. If the town had 0 manufacturing jobs, 0 mining jobs, and everybody worked in law, medicine, and accounting, or if a third of the town were hedge fund managers, it would be horrifically imbalanced.


The one thing that the economy absolutely cannot do without is insurance and then re-insurance or "insurance for the insurers." Nothing gets done without insurance. Goods don't move, doctors don't do medicine, lawyers don't do law, accountants don't do accountancy, engineers don't engineer, builders don't build, shippers don't ship. On some level every single one of us is beholden to those cubicle occupying bean counting policy underwriters and claims adjusters. I told a colleague, "as a lawyer having to deal with insurance companies on a continual and ongoing basis, insurance companies are my second biggest source of headaches coming just behind lawyers, although sometimes they come in at the head of the pack."


Retail is going to be slashed and burned by AI due to the states like California pushing minimum wage into the stratosphere which will serve to spur corporations to automate as much front-end retail work as possible. It is also likely that advances in AI will begin to put many insurance workers out of business as advanced algorithms begin to do underwriting and claims adjusting.

I would suspect that AI will become a growing threat to law and medicine, but I also tend to believe lawyers and doctors have enough lobbying clout to use the force of law to make sure AI cannot directly threaten their respective bottom-lines. "That AI construct is practicing law/medicine without a license, and it isn't possible to license an AI construct" combined with the hesitancy of a malpractice carrier to issue a policy to a construct, will probably serve to at least delay, if not derail, mass AI encroachment into law and medicine.


In economic terms, AI, combined with increasing government regulations making it difficult for small and medium businesses to remain viable, is perhaps the single biggest threat to the economy for the average American. We're entering an era where the large established corporate giants can easily afford the colossal upfront costs of transitioning to AI, while the smaller players are just going to get wiped out because of rising labor costs due to increases in minimum wage and the soaring costs of raw materials and energy. I see this as largely deliberate and I believe the agitation for increases in minimum wage is coming from those established giants who have already decided to transition to AI and who want to make labor unaffordable for their smaller competitors.
 
Now, per this diatribe, it takes "growing up poor" to learn these things.

We're doomed.


Thank you,
MrSmith
As we are witnessing... The US Government is giving handout's so the reality is no one, in America, is growing up poor.
The illegal's are given debit cards, clothing, food and shelter. Yet, they continue to complain.
Children are given free meals at school.
Anyone can walk into an ER and be given the same medical care as a person who worked all their life and paid for healthcare.
Doomed = Unsustainable
The end result will be the same.
 
As we are witnessing... The US Government is giving handout's so the reality is no one, in America, is growing up poor.
The illegal's are given debit cards, clothing, food and shelter. Yet, they continue to complain.
Children are given free meals at school.
Anyone can walk into an ER and be given the same medical care as a person who worked all their life and paid for healthcare.
Doomed = Unsustainable
The end result will be the same.

Don't kid yourself there are plenty of people growing up poor and more so in the future. Your great-grandkids will likely grow up poor and never own a home unless you own one right now and pass it down to them (and subsequent generations don't lose it due to stupidity). Free ER? One of my guys got bit by a rattlesnake and it was a 125k dollars. Without insurance it's bankruptcy.

And it's perfectly sustainable, just not for 95% of us. It will be sustainable for the people at the top who own the money printer.
 
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Don't kid yourself there are plenty of people growing up poor and more so in the future. Your great-grandkids will likely grow up poor and never own a home unless you own one right now and pass it down to them (and subsequent generations don't lose it due to stupidity). Free ER? One of my guys got bit by a rattlesnake and it was a 125k dollars. Without insurance it's bankruptcy.

And it's perfectly sustainable, just not for 95% of us. It will be sustainable for the people at the top who own the money printer.


The government could enact onerous property taxes and other regulations/restrictions to regulate people out of their homes.

It is also possible they could invalidate the USD, let it fail, replace it with a CBDC, and then make all taxes payable only in CBDC, and all corporations would get on-board with mass vaxx mandates, so if you don't play ball you cannot get a corporate job and you cannot earn the CBDC and thus you cannot pay property taxes and you lose your primary residence in due time over the taxes.

It doesn't take much imagination to conceive of scenarios whereby they curtail private property over a generation. I just thought this up on the fly. Imagine what they are doing with their teams of Ivy League grads and Wall Street suits.
 
Don't kid yourself there are plenty of people growing up poor and more so in the future. Your great-grandkids will likely grow up poor and never own a home unless you own one right now and pass it down to them (and subsequent generations don't lose it due to stupidity). Free ER? One of my guys got bit by a rattlesnake and it was a 125k dollars. Without insurance it's bankruptcy.

And it's perfectly sustainable, just not for 95% of us. It will be sustainable for the people at the top who own the money printer.
Perhaps we have different perspectives of what the "poor" look like.
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The $125k was paid by an insurance company. That covered the illegal alien crossing southern Texas that got bit by another rattlesnake.
The CEO's of Americas largest "non-profit" hospitals are paid from $5 million to $10 million / yearly. Hospitals are not going broke.
The working Americans keep the lights on at the hospitals... and much more.
I think the culture in America will change quite a bit before my great grand kids need a house. That is one of my least worries.

 
Ahhhh... "The US Central Bank" finally released the report. Not good.


April 19 (Reuters) - Some 1,804 depository institutions tapped the emergency lending facility set up last March in the wake of Silicon Valley Bank's collapse, amounting to about 20% of all eligible firms, the Federal Reserve said on Friday.
About 95% of the borrowers, which included banks, credit unions, savings associations, and branches and agencies of foreign banks, had less than $10 billion in assets, the U.S. central bank said in its semi-annual Financial Stability Report.

The Bank Term Funding Program, as it was called, was aimed at addressing a liquidity crunch after a run on deposits led to the failures of SVB and Signature Bank and forced financial authorities to stage a rescue of the sector.
The facility lent on collateral without applying the usual haircuts and the loans were made on cheap terms.
The program stopped making new loans on March 11, a year after its creation. At its peak it extended a total of $165 billion in loans, with terms of up to a year. It is expected to close down completely by next March.


 
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Ahhhh... "The US Central Bank" finally released the report. Not good.


April 19 (Reuters) - Some 1,804 depository institutions tapped the emergency lending facility set up last March in the wake of Silicon Valley Bank's collapse, amounting to about 20% of all eligible firms, the Federal Reserve said on Friday.
About 95% of the borrowers, which included banks, credit unions, savings associations, and branches and agencies of foreign banks, had less than $10 billion in assets, the U.S. central bank said in its semi-annual Financial Stability Report.

The Bank Term Funding Program, as it was called, was aimed at addressing a liquidity crunch after a run on deposits led to the failures of SVB and Signature Bank and forced financial authorities to stage a rescue of the sector.
The facility lent on collateral without applying the usual haircuts and the loans were made on cheap terms.
The program stopped making new loans on March 11, a year after its creation. At its peak it extended a total of $165 billion in loans, with terms of up to a year. It is expected to close down completely by next March.


Yeah, but the interest they were charging was less than US treasury rates so banks were borrowing, then investing right back with the government. Hard to draw conclusions just from participate counts. They didn't fix that arbitrage until near the end of the program.
 
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Getting more difficult to get home owners insurance.

Tokio Marine America Insurance Co. and Trans Pacific Insurance Co., both owned by Japanese firm Tokio Marine Holdings Inc., filed notices to California's Department of Insurance saying the companies would cease offering homeowners insurance and umbrella policies in the Golden State.