Welcome to the Hardcore Husky Forums. Folks who are well-known in Cyberland and not that dumb.

AT&T giving more back

135

Comments

  • GrundleStiltzkin
    GrundleStiltzkin Member Posts: 61,516 Standard Supporter

    Nobody said that all that business needs is a tax cut. Why do you always argue like a straw man fucking faggot?

    You should be embarrassed to be alive

    you're really being disrespectful of straw men faggots by putting them in with hondo.

    Straw men faggots > Hondo > faggot hollow men >>>>>>> Cal
    Take that, Cal.
  • 2001400ex
    2001400ex Member Posts: 29,457

    Landlines, the phone book, newspaper and magazine subscriptions...

    Hondo, where were you when the typewriter manufacturers were laid off?

    Air conditioning manufacturers, coal industry workers, steel industry workers, US manufacturing workers and I are having belly laughs.

    It’s almost like US economy has been modernizing for the benefit of the skilled and educated.

    Meanwhile, Troomps celebrate the demise of landlines.

    I’m sure you guys are going to kick ass on third world labor in 2018!

    MAGA!











    Germán Curá plans to bring 600 manufacturing jobs in December to Bay City, Texas, where his European firm, Tenaris, is opening a $1.8 billion steel pipe plant. The rise of the U.S. shale industry largely drove the company's decision to open the plant, but Curá argues that the ability to use advanced technology to create jobs also played a role.

    Along with market size and enforcement of trade laws, "I think manufacturing in the States is coming back because companies have understood that with the appropriate technology with automation ... in the end it's translated in our ability to look at manufacturing as a sustainable, feasible activity," he says.

    That sentiment may mark a shift in manufacturing, which has long been considered a victim of automation. One study from Ball State University estimates that 87% of the manufacturing jobs lost between 2000 and 2010 were attributed to automation and improved efficiency.

    Curá says the typical employee at Tenaris, which also has operations in Canada and Mexico, has changed from "a person pushing a pipe to a person operating a robot."
    So you are saying companies are bringing jobs back to America as long as they can be automated? Nice work.
  • doogie
    doogie Member Posts: 15,072
    I wonder how much tax revenue the US is earning on all that offshore cash sitting offshore now?
  • 2001400ex
    2001400ex Member Posts: 29,457
    doogie said:

    I wonder how much tax revenue the US is earning on all that offshore cash sitting offshore now?

    Obvious idiocy is obvious.
  • RaceBannon
    RaceBannon Member, Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 115,599 Founders Club
    2001400ex said:

    Landlines, the phone book, newspaper and magazine subscriptions...

    Hondo, where were you when the typewriter manufacturers were laid off?

    Air conditioning manufacturers, coal industry workers, steel industry workers, US manufacturing workers and I are having belly laughs.

    It’s almost like US economy has been modernizing for the benefit of the skilled and educated.

    Meanwhile, Troomps celebrate the demise of landlines.

    I’m sure you guys are going to kick ass on third world labor in 2018!

    MAGA!











    Germán Curá plans to bring 600 manufacturing jobs in December to Bay City, Texas, where his European firm, Tenaris, is opening a $1.8 billion steel pipe plant. The rise of the U.S. shale industry largely drove the company's decision to open the plant, but Curá argues that the ability to use advanced technology to create jobs also played a role.

    Along with market size and enforcement of trade laws, "I think manufacturing in the States is coming back because companies have understood that with the appropriate technology with automation ... in the end it's translated in our ability to look at manufacturing as a sustainable, feasible activity," he says.

    That sentiment may mark a shift in manufacturing, which has long been considered a victim of automation. One study from Ball State University estimates that 87% of the manufacturing jobs lost between 2000 and 2010 were attributed to automation and improved efficiency.

    Curá says the typical employee at Tenaris, which also has operations in Canada and Mexico, has changed from "a person pushing a pipe to a person operating a robot."
    So you are saying companies are bringing jobs back to America as long as they can be automated? Nice work.
    Manufacturers say that.

    Keep rooting for unemployment and failure
  • RaceBannon
    RaceBannon Member, Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 115,599 Founders Club
    2001400ex said:

    doogie said:

    I wonder how much tax revenue the US is earning on all that offshore cash sitting offshore now?

    Obvious idiocy is obvious.
    What is greater, 35% of nothing or 21% of cash returning home ?
  • doogie
    doogie Member Posts: 15,072
    Is this another @UODuckgirl maff question?
  • greenblood
    greenblood Member Posts: 14,566
    edited December 2017

    Landlines, the phone book, newspaper and magazine subscriptions...

    Hondo, where were you when the typewriter manufacturers were laid off?

    Air conditioning manufacturers, coal industry workers, steel industry workers, US manufacturing workers and I are having belly laughs.

    It’s almost like US economy has been modernizing for the benefit of the skilled and educated.

    Meanwhile, Troomps celebrate the demise of landlines.

    I’m sure you guys are going to kick ass on third world labor in 2018!

    MAGA!


    Outsourcing jobs of still viable businesses to other countries vs the extinction of an outdated business entirely.

    There's a difference.