There was fun article years back pointing out that regardless of the “we don’t make anything anymore” narrative, the US has never been lower than the 2nd largest manufacturer in the world.
How’s that narrative go when looking at raw material processing? My understanding is that a decent amount of products we manufacture nowadays have their parts manufactured elsewhere in the world and then are just assembled in the US. That would certainly shift the narrative a bit I think.
This is a genuine question. I know we probably still make our own petroleum products, we haven’t manufactured steel since the 1990s, with the collapse starting in the 80s, but everything else is an informational gap for me.
The article was mostly talking about how manufacturing has changed, becoming less blue collar and more white collar. Far far fewer people are employed at higher salaries due to automation (robots). So manufacturing can’t support entire towns like it used to. Plus what we manufacture has changed - it’s much more high end, high value products.
The US still makes steel for example. It fell compared to the 1960s, but is still at about WW2 levels. That is true for a lot of US manufacturing. The industry is still around, but has not grown since years and automation and falling prices makes them less relevant to the overall economy.
That is surprising and very contrary to the narrative I’ve been hearing. I’d heard that our steel production had dropped to trivial values after the Pittsburgh forges had gone under.
My town’s steel mill is overbooked and absolutely cleaning up financially. A casino moved in a few years ago, bought almost all the land around the mill, and wanted to buy them out for space to make the hotel bigger. The mill basically said, “You literally can’t pay us enough.”
So now we’ve got a steel mill in the middle of a casino’s parking lot.
US iron ore mining, 1890-2014 (Wikipedia)

Not even in 1600?
Eh… what?! The World existed before the US? Get out of here… /s
🤨🤔😐You win this round, smartarse!
It just shows how much of world economy doesn’t make stuff.
Pretty sure China has been intentionally marketing opioids and their precursors to us specifically to get the West back for the opium epidemic
Well known Chinese opioid dynasty, the Sacklers?
After just finishing Dopesick, I can confidently agree this one was good old American capitalism and corruption at work.
I know a lot more about meth than I want to thanks to proximity.
Everything I have read about meth, particularly other people’s medical records, has convinced me that you shouldn’t do meth ever if you value your teeth, your skin, or your heart.
See that’s just recreational meth. I’m only for medicinal meth.
Desoxyn? Damn that’s a stimulant of last resort
Can confirm. And also, don’t make it if you value your house.
Pfft, payday has taught me how to cook. And how to rob banks.
Not even talking about the digital opium: TikTok. You should see what content they push towards Chinese youth vs the rest of the world.
Not sure why you get downvoted, that’s a great point. So many of us are hooked onto our phones. Most of the biggest companies, including TikTok itself, are manufacturing content, even consent, so yes it matters.
Chinese law does not apply in Europe or the US. If you want content like they share in China you’re welcome to convince your government to regulate the platform like China did. Somehow, tik tok got bought out in the US and the content didn’t change! Is it really China exporting opium?







