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Maybe it’s in The Wealth of Nations, but frankly, I haven’t found it to be the most readable thing. Where do US workers get assurance that this makes them better off as well? The economic screeds I’ve run across so far don’t seem to scratch this itch. What do I say to a factory worker? Or someone who knows them? It seems hard for P1+P2 to be convincing it sounds like “the product you (or your family member / acquaintance) were making will now be more affordable to everyone who buys it, which will allow them to spend their money on other products, which you might now produce…?” …this seems unsatisfying to me if I pretend to be a random factory worker. I’m invariably talking to someone with skills rarefied enough that they don’t have to worry about it being outsourced. The exchange tends to fade into the fog at that point.īut more importantly, I’m concerned about how this argument looks to someone who performs such jobs. (Probably a lot less, IMO, but we would need empirical data on that, and this is largely a theoretical argument.) My counter to P3 is that if profit margins are really high enough to afford cuts to support US workers, then the question to be asking is why competition hasn’t already been cutting into them. (Or if they do, they sound like grudging admissions that, on this one point, any politician preaching protectionism might be correct.) The counter I typically get to P2 is that (P3) the price doesn’t need to be higher rather, the employers need to just earn a bit less profit. My counter to that is that (P1) the overseas worker’s alternative is to not work at all, and face starvation (or more likely, a job doing something much less lucrative, such as subsistence farming) meanwhile, (P2) the US worker may now be happily employed, but the price of that product is now higher, leaving its consumers worse off.
Oberon system star citizen for free#
If I were to make the case for free trade to some random person on the internet, I would expect to hear that if someone overseas is willing to produce widgets for half the price of someone in the US, they’re doing it in a sweatshop, or in general, under riskier conditions. Global free trade strikes me as being better for everyone in the long run, but possibly worse in the short run in certain areas. (I don’t recall seeing you address it on the many Youtube videos I’ve watched, though I’d be surprised if you haven’t heard it.)
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Eliot did it actually the one person I think I ought to aim a question I’ve had for several months, regarding protectionism, given the thread about it in OT 114.75. But in this dark era, the scooper is idle, and the spray-bottle lost to the centuries… Once, the Men of the West were able to scoop up his foul doings. Verily, Tevildo, the Prince of Cats, has used the land as his litte-box for far too long. I can only imagine what the books would have been like if he went with is original idea. Gorthû, in the form Gorthaur remained in The Silmarillion both Thû and Sauron name the character in the Lay of Leithian. The name was then changed to Gorthû, Sûr, and finally to Sauron. The Prince of Cats was later replaced by Thû, the Necromancer. Called Tevildo, Tifil and Tiberth among other names, this character played the role later taken by Sauron in the earliest version of the story of Beren and Tinúviel in The Book of Lost Tales.
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The prototype or precursor Sauron-figure was a giant monstrous cat, the Prince of Cats. Since the earliest versions of The Silmarillion legendarium as detailed in the History of Middle-earth series, Sauron underwent many changes. Tolkien’s famous villain, Saruman, was originally envisioned as… a giant cat?