> Wall Street took Main Street's good union jobs where workers had a stake in the value of production and sent them to desperate people in poorer countries with basically no worker or environmental protections.
You cannot force other countries to enforce environmental and worker protections against their will. The US didn't have these before it became a developed economy. So its mighty rich of you to expect other countries to do so right away. OTOH, China, long a country without environmental protection, has started enforcing more and more rules now that it has capital and knowhow and is rapidly moving into renewables. Your argument using these points is a weird strawman.
> I don't support tariffs, but there's no need to extend to the level of ridiculousness. Trade with Mexico was happening before NAFTA and it would have continued without it. But that's irrelevant because that's not what I was proposing. Worker and environmental protections could be added and enforced without ending free trade. And changing our tax structure to be more weighed towards consumption than production couldn't even possibly be twisted to sound like it was referring to a tariff.
Your argument for this has already been debunked by Lazare.
Please stop spreading your dangerous misinformation.
Of course you can't force another country to enact environmental and worker protections against their will. But our country also has its own free will.
>Your argument for this has already been debunked by Lazare.
No, Lazare did the same thing you did which is to play a game of bait and switch by arguing against a point I didn't make. I don't support tariffs, which you falsely accused me of, nor do I believe that putting economic pressure on Mexico to enforce worker and environmental protections would increase US GDP or other silly notions.
You cannot force other countries to enforce environmental and worker protections against their will. The US didn't have these before it became a developed economy. So its mighty rich of you to expect other countries to do so right away. OTOH, China, long a country without environmental protection, has started enforcing more and more rules now that it has capital and knowhow and is rapidly moving into renewables. Your argument using these points is a weird strawman.
> I don't support tariffs, but there's no need to extend to the level of ridiculousness. Trade with Mexico was happening before NAFTA and it would have continued without it. But that's irrelevant because that's not what I was proposing. Worker and environmental protections could be added and enforced without ending free trade. And changing our tax structure to be more weighed towards consumption than production couldn't even possibly be twisted to sound like it was referring to a tariff.
Your argument for this has already been debunked by Lazare. Please stop spreading your dangerous misinformation.