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phonyfeminazi Expert
Joined: 30 Sep 2008 Posts: 7819
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Posted: Wed Mar 10, 2010 11:37 am Post subject: Hang on, O'sama's Millions of Jobs Are Coming............ |
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In Spain, for every "green job" created with solar subsidies, 2.2. jobs in other sectors were destroyed. And each of those green jobs cost $758,471 to create. Shockingly, President Obama points to Spain as a model for America.
_________________ Exposing the secular humanist liberal "progressives". |
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busdriver Journeyman
Joined: 16 Mar 2009 Posts: 3497
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Posted: Wed Mar 10, 2010 11:47 am Post subject: Re: Hang on, O'sama's Millions of Jobs Are Coming........... |
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phonyfeminazi wrote: |
In Spain, for every "green job" created with solar subsidies, 2.2. jobs in other sectors were destroyed. And each of those green jobs cost $758,471 to create. Shockingly, President Obama points to Spain as a model for America.
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Who l cares about Spain, saw last night on nightly news where an Americn manufactuer would dearly love to bring his jobs from China back to the USA., but a minor matter of taxes and cost is all that is stopping him.
Seems that all those smoky, smoggy, polluted , and empty factories in China we all saw during the last Olmypics have become clean, lean, and green today. huh/
And it only cost 81cents an hour in China per manufacturing employee as opposed to $29 plus change in the USA.
All this activity is putting food on the table for workers like 37-year-old Wang Meiqiu. Her hometown, the city of Baoding in China's central Hebei province, was once a decaying factory zone. But, with major state backing, it's being reborn into an unlikely eco-hub boasting 29,000 new jobs, including one for Wang.
"This is solving our unemployment problem," she said.
Quote: | The U.S. faces a huge disadvantage in situations like this. The average factory worker in China costs a company 81 cents an hour to employ, compared to an average of $29.98 an hour for a worker in the United States. Even after taking China’s low cost of living into account, it’s a difference America can’t match.
The disparity brings down China’s prices. Chinese wind turbines, for instance, are often smaller and lower in quality than those made in other countries, but on average they cost 30 percent less. |
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/03/09/eveningnews/main6282499.shtml?tag=contentMain;contentBody
Last edited by busdriver on Wed Mar 10, 2010 12:18 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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dick Journeyman
Joined: 28 Jan 2009 Posts: 3134
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busdriver Journeyman
Joined: 16 Mar 2009 Posts: 3497
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Posted: Wed Mar 10, 2010 12:20 pm Post subject: Re: Hang on, O'sama's Millions of Jobs Are Coming........... |
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busdriver wrote: | phonyfeminazi wrote: |
In Spain, for every "green job" created with solar subsidies, 2.2. jobs in other sectors were destroyed. And each of those green jobs cost $758,471 to create. Shockingly, President Obama points to Spain as a model for America.
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Who l cares about Spain, saw last night on nightly news where an Americn manufactuer would dearly love to bring his jobs from China back to the USA., but a minor matter of taxes and cost is all that is stopping him.
Seems that all those smoky, smoggy, polluted , and empty factories in China we all saw during the last Olmypics have become clean, lean, and green today. huh/
And it only cost 81cents an hour in China per manufacturing employee as opposed to $29 plus change in the USA.
All this activity is putting food on the table for workers like 37-year-old Wang Meiqiu. Her hometown, the city of Baoding in China's central Hebei province, was once a decaying factory zone. But, with major state backing, it's being reborn into an unlikely eco-hub boasting 29,000 new jobs, including one for Wang.
Quote: |
"This is solving our unemployment problem," she said.
Quote: | The U.S. faces a huge disadvantage in situations like this. The average factory worker in China costs a company 81 cents an hour to employ, compared to an average of $29.98 an hour for a worker in the United States. Even after taking China’s low cost of living into account, it’s a difference America can’t match.
The disparity brings down China’s prices. Chinese wind turbines, for instance, are often smaller and lower in quality than those made in other countries, but on average they cost 30 percent less. |
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/03/09/eveningnews/main6282499.shtml?tag=contentMain;contentBody |
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