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View Full Version : Obama Gives the Finger to American Workers


L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-13-2011, 05:39 PM
Despite campaign promises to reform trade deals, President Obama has asked Congress to approve three NAFTA-style deals - negotiated by former President George W. Bush - with Panama, Korea and Colombia. The House and Senate are expected to vote on these deals on Wednesday.

Tim Robertson, director of the San Francisco-based California Fair Trade Coalition, says the deals, which continue to ignore labor and environmental rights, have barely changed under the Obama administration.

"They're now running the campaign, along with GOP leaders, to get them passed," he says.
Last Tuesday, Public Citizen kicked off a National Call-in Day (http://www.citizen.org/Page.aspx?pid=4956) urging citizens to tell their Representatives to "stop the job-killing trade deals."

"President Barack Obama has completely flip-flopped on his campaign promises to fix America's failed trade policy and has cast his lot against the majority of the American people who oppose more of these job-killing deals," said Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, in a statement. "At a time of nine percent unemployment and broad public opposition to more NAFTA-style trade agreements, it's a fairly shocking shift away from the president's job-creation message to suddenly call on Congress to pass three old Bush trade deals that the federal government's own studies say will increase the U.S. trade deficit."

"The last thing American workers and our economy needs is more NAFTA-style free trade agreements," said Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) in a statement.

When President Obama announced the US-Korea agreement in December, he said the tariff reductions alone would boost annual exports of American goods by up to $11 billion, but what he failed to say is that, according to a report by the US International Trade Commission (http://www.usitc.gov/publications/pub3949.pdf), an independent government agency, imports from Korea would be even higher. According to the report, imports would include dairy products, apparel, footwear, textiles and motor vehicles and parts.

The Economic Policy Institute (http://www.epi.org/publication/free_trade_agreement_with_korea_will_cost_u-s-_jobs/) estimates that the agreement with Korea, which is expected to be the largest trade deal since NAFTA, will increase the US trade deficit by $16.7 billion and displace 159,000 US jobs within the first seven years after it takes effect.

The deal with Korea is 1,200 pages long. Approximately 88 pages focus on traditional trade issues like quotas and tariffs, while the rest focus on regulations, intellectual property, investment and dispute settlements. Many of these trade deals allow multinational corporations to sue local, state and national governments for introducing new laws or regulations that they say will undermine profits.

"Opening markets only means more intense competition and downward pressure on worker wages. The experience of past decades of trade liberalization should be proof enough," writes (http://kpolicy.org/documents/policy/101008christineahnmartinhartlandsbergforgettheftaf ix.html) Christine Ahn, senior fellow at the Korea Policy Institute, and Martin Hart-Landsberg, professor of economics at Lewis and Clark College.

The administration wants the deals passed before South Korean President Lee Myung-bak's state visit to the White House on Thursday.

Then there's Colombia. According to the AFL-CIO and other labor groups, Colombia is the most dangerous place in the world for trade unionists. In 2010, 51 trade unionists were assassinated in Colombia - more than in the rest of the world combined. Despite Colombia's heralded "Labor Action Plan," another 22 have been killed this year. The AFL-CIO asks, "Why would we reward a country where 51 CEOs were killed last year?"

And Panama, with a history of failing to protect workers' rights, is known as a tax haven for money launderers and tax dodgers.

Since 2000, the US has lost six million manufacturing jobs and 42,4000 factories have closed, according to Manufacturing & Technology News.

"That was the worst decade on record for manufacturing in our country, even worse than the great depression," says Scott Paul, executive director of the Alliance for American Manufacturing, a nonpartisan, nonprofit partnership forged to strengthen manufacturing in the US. "We lost fully one-third of our manufacturing employment over the last decade and we were on a steep downward trend even before the recession. That only exacerbated the situation."

Paul says automation and technology, globalization and the systems that are put into place by free trade agreements, are responsible for the sad state of manufacturing in the US today. "The onset of China was probably the nail in the coffin," he says.

And, yet, with 14 million people out of work and another nine million part-time workers looking for full-time work, free trade deals are rarely mentioned in the national dialog. The print media tend to cover these deals with the predictable "he said, she said," narrative, and they're rarely mentioned on the cable shows.


Continues:


http://www.truth-out.org/us-jobs-danger-nafta-style-deal-heads-congress/1318253738

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-13-2011, 05:51 PM
How can this lying sack of sh*t talk about jobs with a straight face while green-lighting this?

Bronx33
10-13-2011, 06:08 PM
How can this lying sack of sh*t talk about jobs with a straight face while green-lighting this?



Cause american people are to stupid to do anything about it the clowns will still throw their votes away on him cause they dont know any better ( i blame todays media) its borderline useless.

epicSocialism4tw
10-13-2011, 09:03 PM
How can this lying sack of sh*t talk about jobs with a straight face while green-lighting this?

Obama is owned by the globalists...many believe that he's just a puppet of George Soros.

hazefrog
10-13-2011, 09:43 PM
Obama is owned by the globalists...many believe that he's just a puppet of George Soros.

Any chance you'll put on your big kid pants and admit that most of your precious righties are owned by the same globalists? Bush was, Cain is....

Spider
10-14-2011, 12:53 AM
he lost my vote
....
for the 1st time since i was able to vote,thinking bout not voting

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-14-2011, 01:11 AM
Any chance you'll put on your big kid pants and admit that most of your precious righties are owned by the same globalists? Bush was, Cain is....

Yep.

Despite campaign promises to reform trade deals, President Obama has asked Congress to approve three NAFTA-style deals - negotiated by former President George W. Bush - with Panama, Korea and Colombia. The House and Senate are expected to vote on these deals on Wednesday.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-14-2011, 01:14 AM
he lost my vote
....
for the 1st time since i was able to vote,thinking bout not voting

Same here.

I plan to write in Senator Bernie Sanders for president in 2012.

http://sanders.senate.gov/

epicSocialism4tw
10-14-2011, 02:11 AM
Any chance you'll put on your big kid pants and admit that most of your precious righties are owned by the same globalists? Bush was, Cain is....

Bush, yes.

Cain, no.

Cain doesn't have the big money fund-raising behind him, and is not a career politician. The big money globalists are trying as hard as they can to get Romney the nomination.

W*GS
10-14-2011, 02:23 AM
Obama is owned by the globalists...many believe that he's just a puppet of George Soros.

You're the used condom discarded by the Koch Bros...

Garcia Bronco
10-14-2011, 09:28 AM
I am disappointed by this.

BroncoInferno
10-14-2011, 09:40 AM
Same here.

I plan to write in Senator Bernie Sanders for president in 2012.

http://sanders.senate.gov/

I will probably do the same. Obama has zero chance in my state anyway.

mosca
10-14-2011, 10:19 AM
Cain doesn't have the big money fund-raising behind him, and is not a career politician. The big money globalists are trying as hard as they can to get Romney the nomination.
Former chairman of the KC Fed. He is one of the big boys.

mosca
10-14-2011, 10:20 AM
Same here.

I plan to write in Senator Bernie Sanders for president in 2012.

http://sanders.senate.gov/
Sanders should form a broad-based coalition with Ron Paul and Ralph Nader, among others.

alkemical
10-14-2011, 11:57 AM
Former chairman of the KC Fed. He is one of the big boys.

I like how this is ignored and not mentioned.

TonyR
10-14-2011, 12:23 PM
...many believe that he's just a puppet of George Soros.

By "many" do you mean "those who regularly watch Glenn Beck"?

Smiling Assassin27
10-14-2011, 12:28 PM
By "many" do you mean "those who regularly watch Glenn Beck"?


no, by 'many', he means 'George Soros'. ;)

My name is George Soros, for we are many...

Tombstone RJ
10-14-2011, 12:38 PM
VOTE RON PAUL, 'nuff said.

peacepipe
10-14-2011, 02:17 PM
I'll never vote for ron paul or any GOP canidate,but **** like this almost makes me think about staying home.At the end of the day i'll still vote for obama cuz he's still better than any option the GOP has to offer.

cutthemdown
10-14-2011, 02:22 PM
Peace what about Ron Paul are you against? Like what is your biggest sticking point with him? the fact there would be no entitlements like welfare?

epicSocialism4tw
10-14-2011, 02:26 PM
Former chairman of the KC Fed. He is one of the big boys.

Not really. He hasnt even begun to raise money.

peacepipe
10-14-2011, 02:26 PM
Peace what about Ron Paul are you against? Like what is your biggest sticking point with him? the fact there would be no entitlements like welfare? switching from one conservative to another is what I got against him. he's no different than any other conservative, because he's found a populace message that works within the conservative base doesn't change his stripes.
you can paint a pinto any color you want,it's still a pinto.

Spider
10-14-2011, 02:32 PM
Peace what about Ron Paul are you against? Like what is your biggest sticking point with him? the fact there would be no entitlements like welfare?

so you are ok with lettin AL Qadea continue on and us not bothering them? your hatred for welfare trumps anyones hatred for Al Qadea ?

Tombstone RJ
10-14-2011, 03:54 PM
I'll never vote for ron paul or any GOP canidate,but **** like this almost makes me think about staying home.At the end of the day i'll still vote for obama cuz he's still better than any option the GOP has to offer.

translation: "I'm doing the same thing over and over but expecting different results."

Yep, Einstein was right about people like you, you're insane.

cutthemdown
10-14-2011, 04:33 PM
so you are ok with lettin AL Qadea continue on and us not bothering them? your hatred for welfare trumps anyones hatred for Al Qadea ?

No, not saying I am a Paul supporter. Quite honestly it's like this when i listen to him. Yeah, **** yeah, oh yeah, this guy is great, ......huh, what did he say, oh man that would not work etc etc. I was more interested what the liberals don't like about him.

cutthemdown
10-14-2011, 04:34 PM
So Peace you won't even say an issue? Just flat out no conservatives. That pretty much sums you up I guess. You don't vote for anything, you vote against things.

barryr
10-14-2011, 09:27 PM
Liberals will stay home and not vote before they vote for anyone other than a democrat.

cutthemdown
10-14-2011, 09:55 PM
Liberals will stay home and not vote before they vote for anyone other than a democrat.

I've done that before. Just not voted for certain things. I often just poke everything on issues I dont really know, calif propositions are a joke sometimes voting yes is really voting no etc etc. But If Obama doesn't fire up the blacks, mexicans, to vote for him he is going to lose. It was that broad support he got that helped him win. Now he is pissing off the unions. The unions are starting to use their money to file lawsuits, do recalls, and focus more on local elections. The dems may be losing some of that money moving forward.

mosca
10-15-2011, 03:17 AM
I've done that before. Just not voted for certain things.
I'll just as quickly not vote if it's something I'm not educated on... For example, I moved states a couple years back and didn't know the difference between many of the local politicians in my new area. I'd rather abstain from voting than just randomly pick one person at the ballot box whose name sounds better. I don't even want to know how many people actually do that, and I know that many do.

I also abstained from voting for McCain or Obama last time around, and I was in a state that did not allow the option of write-ins. If both options are garbage, there is no shame in not voting. Being forced to choose from two candidates you never wanted in the first place stinks of the USSR's single-candidate elections.