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Well well look who has the most high paying factory jobs..the south

Wyatt earp

Diamond Member
Apr 21, 2012
69,975
16,396
I seen this arguing with rderp..




The other big cluster of industrial hotspots is in the Southeast. Manufacturing has been heading to the region for several decades, recently primed by major investments from German and Japanese companies, among others. A prime example is Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro, Tenn., No. 4 on our list, where manufacturing employment has jumped 23.9% since 2009. Japan’s Nissan and Bridgestone have establishing manufacturing plants in Central Tennessee, which has also created opportunities for small domestic parts companies in the region. Nissan also relocated its U.S. headquarters to the area in 2006 from Southern California. And domestic auto makers are have become major players in the Southeast—Ford employs some 14,000 in the Louisville, Ky., area, which checks in at No. 7 among our largest MSAs. The South, notes a recentBrookings study, now has the highest number of workers in the country employed in “advanced industries,” which tend to be the higher paying, more technically oriented parts of the factory economy.
 
You guys lie...


SAN FRANCISCO — Samsung Electronics is the latest company to dangle the possibility of bringing production to the U.S. to curry favor with the Trump administration.


In a statement to USA TODAY, Samsung said: "The U.S. is an important market for Samsung Electronics and we have been making significant investments, including Austin, Tex., where we have invested $17 billion to date in our semiconductor manufacturing facility. We continue to evaluate new investment needs in the U.S. that can help us best serve our customers."

LG Electronics is looking at Tennessee for a new home appliances and television plant that is under consideration, Reuters also reported. LG said in January that it was considering building a manufacturing facility in the U.S.
 
Last edited:
What is your point ?
_______

I don't think anybody can make a point for you...I think you understand Marx only, and him only at about a sixth grade level.

Here are the barest facts you need:

1) Capitalism, the Profit Incentive, is the best system so far created, because it rewards the Industrious Citizen; whereas its opposite, Socialism, rewards the Slothful Citizen. Human Nature is involved.

2) Being the Best System, does not mean it is perfect, and Capitalism's flaw (also Human Nature's Flaw) is Greed. That it has a flaw, does not mean Socialism is better, because Socialism has far more deadly flaws...look to Human Nature....it has never worked in history.

3) Every Generation has to learn this anew and the latest generation doesn't not have the old Bankrupt Soviet Union as an example...the grandest experiment in Socialism ever hoped for, and its most spectacular failure.

4) So, because of the Greed of the New England Robber Barons, Unions formed to get the common man a living wage in the coal mines and in the factories...and reasonable work day hour and other benefits., etc.

5) Private Unions fought private Greed, and won, and then Unions got greedy themselves...remember human Nature is involved...and demanded so much that the manufacturing started moving to what are called Right-to-work States...like Tennessee and other Southern States.

6) Right-to-Work States maintain a respect for the Worker and the Employer by saying you can join a Union, but you don't have to...that you don't automatically have to have your employer withhold from your paycheck Union Dues which go straight to the Democrat (Socialist) Party.
_____________________________________

So...to simplify things as best possible...which I know you appreciate...the Jobs are in the South, because there are not many Socialists in the South.............that's his point.

_______
 
Obama did a great job...Way to go Obama..


Why did he help the red states not Blue?


Ever hear of Right to work and dumb ass unions costing them their own jobs because of laziness?

If you look at most blue states like California for instance they have gone Hi tech and is booming also, most of the industry jobs have left near the cities.
Texas is a hot spot too for Hi-tech ...

Probably Tennessee has more land available for the space needed for the big industries .. I hope to see more come in..
 
I seen this arguing with rderp..




The other big cluster of industrial hotspots is in the Southeast. Manufacturing has been heading to the region for several decades, recently primed by major investments from German and Japanese companies, among others. A prime example is Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro, Tenn., No. 4 on our list, where manufacturing employment has jumped 23.9% since 2009. Japan’s Nissan and Bridgestone have establishing manufacturing plants in Central Tennessee, which has also created opportunities for small domestic parts companies in the region. Nissan also relocated its U.S. headquarters to the area in 2006 from Southern California. And domestic auto makers are have become major players in the Southeast—Ford employs some 14,000 in the Louisville, Ky., area, which checks in at No. 7 among our largest MSAs. The South, notes a recentBrookings study, now has the highest number of workers in the country employed in “advanced industries,” which tend to be the higher paying, more technically oriented parts of the factory economy.
Look at your link:

Mapping Advanced Industries in the 100 Largest Metro Areas

First New York
Second California
Third Washington DC
Fourth Chicago
 
You guys lie...


SAN FRANCISCO — Samsung Electronics is the latest company to dangle the possibility of bringing production to the U.S. to curry favor with the Trump administration.


In a statement to USA TODAY, Samsung said: "The U.S. is an important market for Samsung Electronics and we have been making significant investments, including Austin, Tex., where we have invested $17 billion to date in our semiconductor manufacturing facility. We continue to evaluate new investment needs in the U.S. that can help us best serve our customers."

LG Electronics is looking at Tennessee for a new home appliances and television plant that is under consideration, Reuters also reported. LG said in January that it was considering building a manufacturing facility in the U.S.


Woa wait a second remember when he didnt have any television factory's?


Now it appears we will have two. One in South Carolina and now another one in Tennessee



.
 
I seen this arguing with rderp..




The other big cluster of industrial hotspots is in the Southeast. Manufacturing has been heading to the region for several decades, recently primed by major investments from German and Japanese companies, among others. A prime example is Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro, Tenn., No. 4 on our list, where manufacturing employment has jumped 23.9% since 2009. Japan’s Nissan and Bridgestone have establishing manufacturing plants in Central Tennessee, which has also created opportunities for small domestic parts companies in the region. Nissan also relocated its U.S. headquarters to the area in 2006 from Southern California. And domestic auto makers are have become major players in the Southeast—Ford employs some 14,000 in the Louisville, Ky., area, which checks in at No. 7 among our largest MSAs. The South, notes a recentBrookings study, now has the highest number of workers in the country employed in “advanced industries,” which tend to be the higher paying, more technically oriented parts of the factory economy.
Look at your link:

Mapping Advanced Industries in the 100 Largest Metro Areas

First New York
Second California
Third Washington DC
Fourth Chicago



Again




The South, notes a recentBrookings study, now has the highest number of workers in the country employed in “advanced industries,” which tend to be the higher paying, more technically oriented parts of the factory economy.
 
All the tooling and automation company's moved down here...




.
 
I seen this arguing with rderp..




The other big cluster of industrial hotspots is in the Southeast. Manufacturing has been heading to the region for several decades, recently primed by major investments from German and Japanese companies, among others. A prime example is Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro, Tenn., No. 4 on our list, where manufacturing employment has jumped 23.9% since 2009. Japan’s Nissan and Bridgestone have establishing manufacturing plants in Central Tennessee, which has also created opportunities for small domestic parts companies in the region. Nissan also relocated its U.S. headquarters to the area in 2006 from Southern California. And domestic auto makers are have become major players in the Southeast—Ford employs some 14,000 in the Louisville, Ky., area, which checks in at No. 7 among our largest MSAs. The South, notes a recentBrookings study, now has the highest number of workers in the country employed in “advanced industries,” which tend to be the higher paying, more technically oriented parts of the factory economy.
Check this out:

http://www.bizjournals.com/louisville/news/2014/01/30/ford-to-invest-80-million-in-kentucky.html

Ford Motor Co. is continuing it substantial investment and longtime presence in Louisville with an $80 million expansion of its Kentucky Truck Plant.

Those funds will be used for automation upgrades in its paint shop, new welding robots and steel press automation, the company announced during a news conference this morning.

----------------------------------
Automated Paint Shop?
New welding robots?
Steel press automation?

All that automation. Think it leads to new jobs? You think they will have a welder and a welding robot side by side?
 
I seen this arguing with rderp..




The other big cluster of industrial hotspots is in the Southeast. Manufacturing has been heading to the region for several decades, recently primed by major investments from German and Japanese companies, among others. A prime example is Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro, Tenn., No. 4 on our list, where manufacturing employment has jumped 23.9% since 2009. Japan’s Nissan and Bridgestone have establishing manufacturing plants in Central Tennessee, which has also created opportunities for small domestic parts companies in the region. Nissan also relocated its U.S. headquarters to the area in 2006 from Southern California. And domestic auto makers are have become major players in the Southeast—Ford employs some 14,000 in the Louisville, Ky., area, which checks in at No. 7 among our largest MSAs. The South, notes a recentBrookings study, now has the highest number of workers in the country employed in “advanced industries,” which tend to be the higher paying, more technically oriented parts of the factory economy.
Check this out:

http://www.bizjournals.com/louisville/news/2014/01/30/ford-to-invest-80-million-in-kentucky.html

Ford Motor Co. is continuing it substantial investment and longtime presence in Louisville with an $80 million expansion of its Kentucky Truck Plant.

Those funds will be used for automation upgrades in its paint shop, new welding robots and steel press automation, the company announced during a news conference this morning.

----------------------------------
Automated Paint Shop?
New welding robots?
Steel press automation?

All that automation. Think it leads to new jobs? You think they will have a welder and a welding robot side by side?


Check this out...





Fade To Black The 1980s vision of "lights-out" manufacturing, where robots do all the work, is a dream no more.

By Christopher Null and Brian Caulfield
June 1, 2003
(Business 2.0) – It's been two decades since Roger Smith explained how robots--so reliable they could bolt up a transmission in the dark--would make General Motors as efficient as its rivals in Japan. But Smith's infatuation with so-called lights-out manufacturing quickly went the way of the Chevy Chevette; GM couldn't get its machines to work properly, even with the lights on. The paint robots often wound up painting themselves.
 
I seen this arguing with rderp..




The other big cluster of industrial hotspots is in the Southeast. Manufacturing has been heading to the region for several decades, recently primed by major investments from German and Japanese companies, among others. A prime example is Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro, Tenn., No. 4 on our list, where manufacturing employment has jumped 23.9% since 2009. Japan’s Nissan and Bridgestone have establishing manufacturing plants in Central Tennessee, which has also created opportunities for small domestic parts companies in the region. Nissan also relocated its U.S. headquarters to the area in 2006 from Southern California. And domestic auto makers are have become major players in the Southeast—Ford employs some 14,000 in the Louisville, Ky., area, which checks in at No. 7 among our largest MSAs. The South, notes a recentBrookings study, now has the highest number of workers in the country employed in “advanced industries,” which tend to be the higher paying, more technically oriented parts of the factory economy.
Check this out:

http://www.bizjournals.com/louisville/news/2014/01/30/ford-to-invest-80-million-in-kentucky.html

Ford Motor Co. is continuing it substantial investment and longtime presence in Louisville with an $80 million expansion of its Kentucky Truck Plant.

Those funds will be used for automation upgrades in its paint shop, new welding robots and steel press automation, the company announced during a news conference this morning.

----------------------------------
Automated Paint Shop?
New welding robots?
Steel press automation?

All that automation. Think it leads to new jobs? You think they will have a welder and a welding robot side by side?

BTW you do know that's like 10 million dollars in construction jobs right?

Also who is going to run all the new wiring for the AB robots?

It's a big job worked on a side as a electrician for BMW for a while..

It was a shit load of them AB robots and they all had to be installed...
 
In fact, read the entire Report from 2013:

The nation’s declining concentration in advanced industries and its negative trade balance in the sector do not bode well. Since 2000, the sector’s employment and output as a share of the total U.S. economy has shrunk, and the nation’s standing on these measures now lags world leaders. Equally worrisome is the balance of trade in the sector. Although advanced industries export $1.1 trillion worth of goods and services each year and account for roughly 60 percent of total U.S. exports, the United States ran a $632 billion trade deficit in the sector in 2012, in line with similar yearly balances since 1999. To be sure, a handful of individual advanced industries such as royalties and other intellectual property and aerospace manufacturing enjoy trade surpluses that exceeded $60 and $80 billion in 2012. However, numerous areas of historical strength such as communications equipment, computer equipment, motor vehicles, and pharmaceuticals now run sizeable deficits, as do high-value R&D services and computer and information services

https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/AdvancedIndustry_FinalFeb2lores-1.pdf

This from the Executive report:

● In terms of the sector’s growth and change, the total number of jobs in the sector has remained mostly flat since 1980, but its output has soared.

● Recharge the skills pipeline. More qualified workers with different and more technical skillsets are also critical to the future competitiveness of the sector. However, the skills prerequisites of modern advanced industries have been changing faster than the country’s ability to train the needed workers. Now that the economy is heating up and firms are beginning to expand again, both private- and public-sector actors—often in partnership—need to bear down on improving the availability of skilled workers by developing smart, industry led, sector-specific, regional skills initiatives. Overall, firms need to get much more involved in developing the skills pipeline and the public sector must become much more responsive to their needs

https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/AdvancedIndustry_ESFinalFeb2lores-1.pdf

------------------------------------

I don't know what you guys THINK I've been saying, but this report, a bit dated, still mirrors what I've been saying all along. That there are 5.8 million jobs availible because people don't have the skills.

America has near record 5.8 million job openings

Because there is a concentration of jobs somewhere doesn't mean there are lot's of jobs.

Because companies are investing doesn't mean they are investing in new workers.

The truth is 88% of jobs in manufacturing disapeared because of automation, not because they moved to somewhere else.

I know you guys want so bad for rdean to be wrong. But it's not happening. I've been saying all along that education is important. The problem with you guys, is you think it isn't.

 
In fact, read the entire Report from 2013:

The nation’s declining concentration in advanced industries and its negative trade balance in the sector do not bode well. Since 2000, the sector’s employment and output as a share of the total U.S. economy has shrunk, and the nation’s standing on these measures now lags world leaders. Equally worrisome is the balance of trade in the sector. Although advanced industries export $1.1 trillion worth of goods and services each year and account for roughly 60 percent of total U.S. exports, the United States ran a $632 billion trade deficit in the sector in 2012, in line with similar yearly balances since 1999. To be sure, a handful of individual advanced industries such as royalties and other intellectual property and aerospace manufacturing enjoy trade surpluses that exceeded $60 and $80 billion in 2012. However, numerous areas of historical strength such as communications equipment, computer equipment, motor vehicles, and pharmaceuticals now run sizeable deficits, as do high-value R&D services and computer and information services

https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/AdvancedIndustry_FinalFeb2lores-1.pdf

This from the Executive report:

● In terms of the sector’s growth and change, the total number of jobs in the sector has remained mostly flat since 1980, but its output has soared.

● Recharge the skills pipeline. More qualified workers with different and more technical skillsets are also critical to the future competitiveness of the sector. However, the skills prerequisites of modern advanced industries have been changing faster than the country’s ability to train the needed workers. Now that the economy is heating up and firms are beginning to expand again, both private- and public-sector actors—often in partnership—need to bear down on improving the availability of skilled workers by developing smart, industry led, sector-specific, regional skills initiatives. Overall, firms need to get much more involved in developing the skills pipeline and the public sector must become much more responsive to their needs

https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/AdvancedIndustry_ESFinalFeb2lores-1.pdf

------------------------------------

I don't know what you guys THINK I've been saying, but this report, a bit dated, still mirrors what I've been saying all along. That there are 5.8 million jobs availible because people don't have the skills.

America has near record 5.8 million job openings

Because there is a concentration of jobs somewhere doesn't mean there are lot's of jobs.

Because companies are investing doesn't mean they are investing in new workers.

The truth is 88% of jobs in manufacturing disapeared because of automation, not because they moved to somewhere else.

I know you guys want so bad for rdean to be wrong. But it's not happening. I've been saying all along that education is important. The problem with you guys, is you think it isn't.





You still want to refuse you cant get jobs to locate here can you?
Yes you can it's happening as we speak.

I proved it over and over again


And you are not that smart on robotics.. Faunc has a lights out factory that it's robots build other robots.. It can go 30 days with no one even going in there...



But do you know how expensive it is?


.
 

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