> A sober approach to promoting the redevelopment of production industry in America would likely involve some tariffs and could make a lot of sense.
If American production was optimal, or even economically feasible, it would already be in place. Take, for example, textiles.
Why would an American business go through the hassle of getting a foreign company to make textile products, get them shipped across vast oceans, taking weeks if not months to do so, only to have them in stores in relatively close proximity?
We all wear clothes and purchase them regularly. So why are they not now largely made in the US?
> I think people are downvoting you because it sounds like you're advocating textiles be produced in the US (I know you're not).
Probably.
Sometimes exploring the implications of an ill thought position leads to an unpopular conclusion. If the worst result is a few people hit a down arrow and others contemplate the exploration, so be it.
If American production was optimal, or even economically feasible, it would already be in place. Take, for example, textiles.
Why would an American business go through the hassle of getting a foreign company to make textile products, get them shipped across vast oceans, taking weeks if not months to do so, only to have them in stores in relatively close proximity?
We all wear clothes and purchase them regularly. So why are they not now largely made in the US?