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American Manufacturing Is About More Than Just Jobs
Bringing back American manufacturing is critical to American society in more ways than just economic ones. In order for America to succeed it needs the ability to make things, not only for the stability and good jobs it provides, but for national security as well.
Showing posts with label 99%. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 99%. Show all posts

Sunday, June 9, 2024

Harsh Words for the 99%

I know it seems like a harsh thing to say but it also happens to be the truth a lot of the time. When it comes to money, most of the time people's financial troubles come from making excuses. Because the reality is that even though money, to some people, seems scarce—it is actually rather quite abundant.

I don't write these things to preach. I write about money and ways to achieve wealth to help people have a different perspective about money.

The thing is, there's always someone to blame if you don't have enough. It's the greedy rich exploiting people. It's the evil employers holding back wages. It's a rigged system. The reality is that it's none of these things.

At least when it comes to living in the United States. Like I said, and I mean it, money is plentiful. It's not to say it's easy, but that's the point. It's not supposed to be. People who achieve wealth largely don't do it by accident.

It takes know-how. It takes hard work. It takes commitment. It takes understanding how money works. It takes understanding what it really is that holds you back. It's being truthful to yourself rather than finding others and situations to blame.

"But you are going to talk about the stock market, and we all know it's rigged and pretty much gambling," you'll probably say.

Wrong. It's not rigged and it's not gambling at all.

In fact, what it is for a lot of people is a terrible and unfortunate missed opportunity. I can't tell you how many times I hear an employee say, "The company's just cheap and cheating me." Especially if it happens to be a publicly traded company I have to ask, "Are you an owner?"

In other words, if you see profits and the business thriving, and people making money from it, why not own it? Why not buy the stock and share in a piece of the action?

In a nutshell, why wait for the company to pay you more? Why not give yourself a raise? Why not be among the shareholders who benefit from your hard labors? It's not like you are barred from being an owner. You might think you are because you maybe feel you don't make enough.

"It's enough just to pay the bills, let alone buy shares." But the reality is, especially when a dividend is offered, that not buying shares is shooting yourself in the foot. You are literally leaving valuable money on the table.

Because one of the keys to building wealth is not from working alone. It's from owning things. It should be common sense. How did the rich guy get rich? He owned the business you work for. If you can also own it, why aren't you doing it? If the company is sharing its profits with shareholders, why aren't you a shareholder?

There are three things you need to have in order to finally get ahead and be less reliant on others for your financial wellbeing. 

You need vision.

You need to understand that your financial stability is not the responsibility nor the obligation of anyone else but you. Your employer needs to fill a position and they pay what they pay. You accepted the job at the pay offered, and that's that. You need to view your situation as an opportunity and have the vision to believe that wealth is achievable even when all the odds seem stacked against you, because other people do it all the time.

You need goals.

Nothing is ever achieved without a plan and a well thought out one. Realize what's possible and then try to figure out how you can achieve what's possible. More importantly, set realistic goals. Wealth is not about luck. It can be in rare situations. But most of the time it's not about luck at all. It's about vision and having a plan and staying committed to it against all odds.

You need courage.

No one achieved wealth without risk. It's just part of the game. You have to be willing to make certain short-term sacrifices in order to achieve long term gains. You have to be willing to put money on the table to gain from it. You have to trust not in the system, but in your judgement. You have to have faith in yourself. Never, ever sell yourself short. Never, ever give in or give up. Never, ever settle. Have an I can attitude. And never, ever look at someone else's success as having held you back from your own.

The world is full of opportunities. Seize every single one of them and never tell yourself you aren't supposed to be part of it.

Because that's the other part of wealth creation many people fail to understand. It's not about them. It's about you. If you don't know something, learn something. If you don't understand something, seek out people and things that can help you to understand things better. Most importantly, look up to successful rich people rather than look down on them.

Concentrate your time and energy on appreciating that rich people represent what is possible if you mimic what they do.

And as I said early on in this post, don't make excuses. Read, learn and execute. Do it early. Don't wait. Because time is money and the more time you waste not doing it, the harder it will be to reach your goals. 

Make money your friend. Not your enemy. Make the rich and the businesses they own your opportunity.

Okay. There's one other thing here. And it may sound controversial. But I am going to tell you it is some of the best advice I ever got in my own personal financial pursuits. Do not listen to your poor friends. Because it's dumb to listen to poor people talk to you about money. They obviously don't know what they are talking about.

They are the ones telling you the rich are just greedy, evil people out to get you. They are the ones telling you the system is unfair and rigged. They are the ones telling you that the stock market is rigged and gambling. They are the ones telling you that you are being exploited. They are the ones saying you can't get ahead. 

They are the ones fortifying the excuse.

Look, say what you want about the 1%. But if you are listening to the 99%? It's the reason you aren't in the 1%. It's also the reason you don't stand a chance to become the 5%, 10% or even the 50%.

Like the way I write or the things I write about? Follow me on my Facebook page or on X to keep up with the latest writings wherever I may write them.

© 2024 Jim Bauer

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

We MUST Fix The Economy or Die

In business there are two realities; the way things should be, and the way things are. But at the end of the day what business is intended to do is to make as much money as possible, principally for the owners of the company. So you can't blame corporations for going overseas for labor if the balance sheets tell you that it just makes good business sense.

For years I have railed against the imbalances in our free market system, and that's saying something since I happen to be a strong proponent of the free market. But what I have argued is that what we have now is not really a free market at all. It's a market that is rigged and it's not necessarily because of the businesses, but because of policy which has made myriad deals with other nations which have served to suffocate the American worker, kill the middle class, widen the gap between the rich and the poor, and simply make our economy a real sour lemon.

I have long held that the key to the continuity of American progress economically is that we have to make things. Back in the day cheaper was a novelty. It was a convenience. People were making good money, and cheaper goods meant they could make it go farther. Now cheaper is a necessity. Median income has been nearly unchanged for the past 30 years—and that's a problem because inflation has not been stagnant.

You want to do the right thing and keep as much of your operations in the United States as possible. But when there are a multitude of things that hinder the sensibility of doing that, you are forced to rethink things and just "go with the flow."

Taxes, regulations, cheap labor overseas, unruly union leaders...

All of these things make it difficult for a business to operate within the margins and compete, not
only with foreign businesses doing business in the United States, but to compete with companies operating within its own borders.

Who knows this better than anyone? Businessmen. If you leave this sort of thing up to people who have never been in business what you wind up with are good intentions that look good in theory and on paper, but when put into reality it becomes clear to see that it's more than just a mess. It's a fucking disaster.

The simple truth is that both establishment republicans and democrats alike simply don't know what's wrong, and therefore don't really have the right solutions for fixing the problem. The democrats want to point fingers at the rich and big business, and want to tout unions who at one time had their place in the world, but are now corrupt and hugely bad for business, and who have done as much damage—if not more—to the stability of the American workers' wages than even the worst trade deals. And there are, of course, the trade deals, largely supported by the republican party in the interest of the free markets, which again, I argue aren't operating like a true free market at all.

Going with the "status quo" simply is not going to get it done. It's a failing proposition, and I think in part it is a large reason Donald Trump is getting so much traction in this presidential race. On the flip side, it may also be a part of why even a guy like Bernie Sanders at any stage in this race could ever be perceived by anyone to be viable—even for progressive liberal democrats. The signal, which is very clear, is that if guys like Sanders and Trump are resonating with voters it is because the majority of Americans—even if they are unclear exactly why—are finally starting to understand that they are no longer even running in place. They are going backwards. And if and until we address this matter, and right quick, it may be impossible to gain any traction economically.

Anyone who has ever had even a little bit of credit card debt knows that it is much harder to get out of debt the deeper in debt you go. If our economy is not fixed now. If the trade imbalances are not fixed now. If the trade deals are not renegotiated now...

We could lose our standing in the world as an economic power, and we may never get it back. Even if we finally work toward that goal, our country would be a second or third tier nation economically for the next 50-100 years.

Unfortunately, and I am a republican mind you, none of the other guys on the stage—not a single one of them except for Donald Trump—will do a damn thing to address the meat of why the economy is largely in the state that it is in.

Granted, Trump may not be able to get anything done either. I get that. But of all of the other candidates on the stage, he is the only guy stating what I have believed for years when it comes to jobs and business and the stability of the American economy.

Cheap labor has us by the balls and our hands our tied behind our backs so we can't loosen the grip.

But it's not just the cheap labor. It is simply a component. It's those fucking trade deals. The one thing we know of our history is that back in the day we knew there would be differences between one economy and another, and in order to level the playing field we made adjustments—tariffs. We have long gotten ridden of correcting imbalances by opening up Most Favored Nation status with countries like China. We've widened imbalances with deals like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)—George H.W. Bush pushed for it, and Clinton eventually signed it into law—and the most recent Trans-Pacific deal. We have allowed Japan to dictate what we can sell to them, and likewise China. We have allowed China, in fact, to tell us flat out "if you want to sell to us, you have to make it in China."

What America has become, and not just in terms of economics, is a giant sell out, and who has been hurt badly by this is us. The American people. And despite our ability to vote our leaders in or out, we really have not had much control on this issue. We've had to simply do what is necessary. But again, continuing along that path puts us in a very real and dangerous situation. We are at that certain turning point in our nation on this issue among other very important ones. It's do or die. We simply must get it right this time around. If we do not, America as we know it may well be lost forever.