Johnny Best
Active Member
"They just don't make good stuff anymore"
That's what I keep telling my wife about me but I'm not sure she buys it.
Probably need a new cam shaft.
"They just don't make good stuff anymore"
That's what I keep telling my wife about me but I'm not sure she buys it.
Maybe just a regrind to get it all nice and pointy again.Probably need a new cam shaft.
Just imagine walking through Lowe's or Home Depot and what the cost of every item on those shelves would be if they were made by people paid 15x more just for the satisfaction of a little American flag on the item.I'm still waiting for all those savings that buying into globalism was supposed to reap for consumers.
Just imagine walking through Lowe's or Home Depot and what the cost of every item on those shelves would be if they were made by people paid 15x more just for the satisfaction of a little American flag on the item.
Its more than getting a “little sticker”. Basic economics would sort it out. These things can be made here for a profit and sold for a competitive price even with higher labor costs.Just imagine walking through Lowe's or Home Depot and what the cost of every item on those shelves would be if they were made by people paid 15x more just for the satisfaction of a little American flag on the item.
Its more than getting a “little sticker”. Basic economics would sort it out. These things can be made here for a profit and sold for a competitive price even with higher labor costs.
Greed and laziness took manufacturing overseas. It wasnt about being competitive, its always been about making more money and doing less for it. Theres no factory to manage and employees to deal with. If I was a ceo, id much rather run that company than one with massive manufacturing infrastructure. Its easier.
Its similar to using wholesalers all of the time. Thats all china is, a massive wholesaler. In time, that wholesaler will sell direct or something else will happen and it bites you in the butt.
It's all ball bearings these days!Just make sure you keep your Fitzer valves clean and you have a lot of sterile gauze and 3 in 1 oil around.
Now, I may be mistaken, but wasn't the Flint crisis caused by corner cutting bureaucrats declining to treat the water to prevent the lead pipes from leaching into the water. The lead that has contaminated the water is just the lead in the supply lines.
And why would a city that only a decade or two earlier was a bustling, dynamic home of well paid, proud, autoworkers and one of the gems of GM's manufacturing base be so broke that not only could it not replace the aging water supply lines in town but also be forced to cut the budget jeopardize the health and welfare of its citizens?
Our brand of capitalism creates winners and losers and the once proud residents of Flint were turned into losers through no fault of their own.
I disagree. I think most consumers want the best product their money can buy and take it for granted that manufacturers are giving it.The problem is, no one wants to pay for quality anymore.
I disagree. I think most consumers want the best product their money can buy and take it for granted that manufacturers are giving it.
The reality though is quite different. At every stage of a product's life, you have pressures from the top being applied to maximize profit and shareholder return while minimizing costs, including and especially labor costs.
It boggles the mind in an economy that is 2/3rds driven by consumer spending that we'd be in the 40th year of an experiment in supply side economics that has proven itself incredibly advantageous for the top 1% but an abysmal failure for the 99% below.
We all know why we can't have nice things and if truly honest with ourselves, we all know how to make it so we can.
I always buy Nikon lens over Tamron because I feel the build quality is better and Nikon lens cost a lot more.
That still falls in the category "no one wants to pay for quality"
consumer wants best bang for buck, which is usually mid range stuff.