Factory construction booming under Joe!

Again, people returning to work from COVID lockdowns and others retiring so the pool is smaller. Zero to do with Biden and his awful policies. Well unless his awful policies have forced people to work multiple jobs to afford necessities.
More people are working now than precovid. That’s a fact. It’s not just COVID recovery echo chamber boy.

IMG_0214.jpeg
 
Yes, the dramatic increase in factories being built in this country is encouraging and does have much to do with the Biden Administratio’s incentives as well as the re-shoring of high tech production of strategic industry. What did Trump’s policies ever accomplish? He couldn’t even keep Harley Davison motorcycle production here!

The Trumpsters like to lie about how the Biden Administration is controlled by, or bribed into subservience by, Communist China. Actually nothing can be further from the truth, as Biden’s policies have led to the greatest sanctioning of Chinese high tech companies ever.

Anyone at all aware of what is happening knows that partly because of this pressure and partly because of growing overall tensions in Chinese-U.S. relations, American companies looking to expand overseas production or seeking to securitize overseas trade relations now refer to “ABC” — “anywhere but China.”

Of course there is still and hopefully will continue to be solid and mutually advantageous trade with China in areas that are not strategic or defense related — but defining this area sometimes requires careful and competent expertise, not the sort of blowhard posturing Trump was — and many other Republicans are — so famous for.
 
Says who?

The oil doesn't magically go from the US ground to the refineries in the US for free. It has to be transported here too. And most of the refineries are on the coast, while most of the shale oil is far from the coast.

Ship is by far a cheaper method of transporting the oil.

And the oil being transported from overseas is cheaper to refine. So its doubly cost effective. Which is why oil companies do it.

They know more than you.
Pipelines are the cheapest and most environmentally friendly wat to transport oil, but your Vegetable Messiah opposes pipelines.
 
Pipelines are the cheapest and most environmentally friendly wat to transport oil, but your Vegetable Messiah opposes pipelines.

So we should pump oil via pipelines that don't exist rather than import light sweet crude on ships that do?

Laughing.....there's a reason we import, Nostra. You can't pump oil through non-existent pipelines. You can ship it, and light sweet is much easier, cheaper and faster to refine.
 
In comparison to what?

A delusional conspiracy theorist who called for the termination of the constitution......and who 3 of his 4 chiefs of staff say should never hold office again.
All I know is what I witnessed during Trump's 4 years. Booming economy, low inflation, low unemployment, no new wars, businesses expanding in the US and returning to the US, NATO members finally paying their fair share, dialog with North Korea, fair trade deals with China, the EU, and Canada/Mexico. Consumer confidence at record highs.

And with senile joe, high inflation, rumors of wars with China, Russia, Iran. War in Europe, unstable dollar, high unemployment, low consumer confidence, majority of americans want him removed from presidency.

Sure, Trump is a typical arrogant northeast rich guy who talks mean (but really isn't). The media has created a negative image of him and you fools are so gullible that you believe whatever they pump into your little heads.
 
Of course, in order to afford to make ends meet more are working. Can’t all be Multimillionaires like you with trophy wives. 🤷‍♂️
Ha ha. So you see more working Americans as some sort of bad thing? Excellent. At least you’re still consistently irrational.
 
Factory construction is booming in the US as the stimulus money in the CHIPS act is being allocated to bring manufacturing back home from China. The numbers are impressive.

Thanks Joe!

The U.S. is building factories at a wildly fast rate (msn.com)

According to data from the Census Bureaureleased last week, construction spending by U.S. manufacturers more than doubled over the past year. For April 2023, the annual rate reached nearly $190 billion compared with $90 billion in June 2022, with manufacturing accounting for around 13% of non-government construction. The US government has offered billions of dollars in subsidies for the production of electric vehicles and solar panels to compete with countries such as China and to fortify US leadership in sectors including clean energy. According to the World Bank, China makes up around 30% of global value added from manufacturing, about double the U.S. Over the last few decades, Asia has taken up a greater share of global factory manufacturing.

Factories are being constructed everywhere from deserts to resort towns as the U.S. tries to bring back manufacturing of goods commonly imported from lower-cost countries. Many battery and electric vehicle factories have popped up in the Rust Belt, while solar panel and renewable energy factories now span much of the South and Southeast.

The U.S. has added around 800,000 jobs in manufacturing employment over the past two years, employing around 13 million workers per the May Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report. However, according to the National Association of Manufacturers, the manufacturing skills gap — caused by the labor market's struggle to find workers with highly technical and manual expertise — could lead to 2.1 million unfilled jobs by 2030.

Manufacturing, though, has accelerated its move back to the US from other countries over the past year. According to Kearney's 2022 Reshoring Index, 96% of American companies have shifted production to the US or are evaluating reshoring operations — a spike from 78% in the 2021 index. The sudden rise in factory construction corresponds with passage of the CHIPS and Science Act in July 2022, which provided $280 billion in funding to boost manufacturing of semiconductors, as well as the Inflation Reduction Act in August 2022. The IRA has sought to create new jobs in manufacturing, construction, and renewable energy, estimated to create up to 1.5 million jobs by 2030
Oh is this like Biden gas dropping but it really isn't thread?
 
Ha ha. So you see more working Americans as some sort of bad thing? Excellent. At least you’re still consistently irrational.
On average a family is paying $700 more per month for the same necessities than under Trump’s last day in office? For a billionaire like you it’s chump change. For most it’s pretty painful. 🤷‍♂️
 
All I know is what I witnessed during Trump's 4 years. Booming economy, low inflation, low unemployment, no new wars, businesses expanding in the US and returning to the US, NATO members finally paying their fair share, dialog with North Korea, fair trade deals with China, the EU, and Canada/Mexico. Consumer confidence at record highs.

And with senile joe, high inflation, rumors of wars with China, Russia, Iran. War in Europe, unstable dollar, high unemployment, low consumer confidence, majority of americans want him removed from presidency.

Sure, Trump is a typical arrogant northeast rich guy who talks mean (but really isn't). The media has created a negative image of him and you fools are so gullible that you believe whatever they pump into your little heads.
That is true but Trump is mean on social media 🤷‍♂️
 
Factory construction is booming in the US as the stimulus money in the CHIPS act is being allocated to bring manufacturing back home from China. The numbers are impressive.

Thanks Joe!

The U.S. is building factories at a wildly fast rate (msn.com)

According to data from the Census Bureaureleased last week, construction spending by U.S. manufacturers more than doubled over the past year. For April 2023, the annual rate reached nearly $190 billion compared with $90 billion in June 2022, with manufacturing accounting for around 13% of non-government construction. The US government has offered billions of dollars in subsidies for the production of electric vehicles and solar panels to compete with countries such as China and to fortify US leadership in sectors including clean energy. According to the World Bank, China makes up around 30% of global value added from manufacturing, about double the U.S. Over the last few decades, Asia has taken up a greater share of global factory manufacturing.

Factories are being constructed everywhere from deserts to resort towns as the U.S. tries to bring back manufacturing of goods commonly imported from lower-cost countries. Many battery and electric vehicle factories have popped up in the Rust Belt, while solar panel and renewable energy factories now span much of the South and Southeast.

The U.S. has added around 800,000 jobs in manufacturing employment over the past two years, employing around 13 million workers per the May Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report. However, according to the National Association of Manufacturers, the manufacturing skills gap — caused by the labor market's struggle to find workers with highly technical and manual expertise — could lead to 2.1 million unfilled jobs by 2030.

Manufacturing, though, has accelerated its move back to the US from other countries over the past year. According to Kearney's 2022 Reshoring Index, 96% of American companies have shifted production to the US or are evaluating reshoring operations — a spike from 78% in the 2021 index. The sudden rise in factory construction corresponds with passage of the CHIPS and Science Act in July 2022, which provided $280 billion in funding to boost manufacturing of semiconductors, as well as the Inflation Reduction Act in August 2022. The IRA has sought to create new jobs in manufacturing, construction, and renewable energy, estimated to create up to 1.5 million jobs by 2030
great now all those homeless people can get jobs,,

whats that?? the homeless dont get the jobs,,

why is that??
 
Factory construction is booming in the US as the stimulus money in the CHIPS act is being allocated to bring manufacturing back home from China. The numbers are impressive.

Thanks Joe!

The U.S. is building factories at a wildly fast rate (msn.com)

According to data from the Census Bureaureleased last week, construction spending by U.S. manufacturers more than doubled over the past year. For April 2023, the annual rate reached nearly $190 billion compared with $90 billion in June 2022, with manufacturing accounting for around 13% of non-government construction. The US government has offered billions of dollars in subsidies for the production of electric vehicles and solar panels to compete with countries such as China and to fortify US leadership in sectors including clean energy. According to the World Bank, China makes up around 30% of global value added from manufacturing, about double the U.S. Over the last few decades, Asia has taken up a greater share of global factory manufacturing.

Factories are being constructed everywhere from deserts to resort towns as the U.S. tries to bring back manufacturing of goods commonly imported from lower-cost countries. Many battery and electric vehicle factories have popped up in the Rust Belt, while solar panel and renewable energy factories now span much of the South and Southeast.

The U.S. has added around 800,000 jobs in manufacturing employment over the past two years, employing around 13 million workers per the May Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report. However, according to the National Association of Manufacturers, the manufacturing skills gap — caused by the labor market's struggle to find workers with highly technical and manual expertise — could lead to 2.1 million unfilled jobs by 2030.

Manufacturing, though, has accelerated its move back to the US from other countries over the past year. According to Kearney's 2022 Reshoring Index, 96% of American companies have shifted production to the US or are evaluating reshoring operations — a spike from 78% in the 2021 index. The sudden rise in factory construction corresponds with passage of the CHIPS and Science Act in July 2022, which provided $280 billion in funding to boost manufacturing of semiconductors, as well as the Inflation Reduction Act in August 2022. The IRA has sought to create new jobs in manufacturing, construction, and renewable energy, estimated to create up to 1.5 million jobs by 2030
I thought democrats didnt like subsidies and big corporations??
 
On average a family is paying $700 more per month for the same necessities than under Trump’s last day in office? For a billionaire like you it’s chump change. For most it’s pretty painful. 🤷‍♂️
Real wages are flat to 2019. Wages have kept pace. I know you like to pretend everything is bad but on the whole people are better off. They are way better off than other comparative nations where we fared the best. Thank Joe when you see him.
 
Real wages are flat to 2019. Wages have kept pace. I know you like to pretend everything is bad but on the whole people are better off. They are way better off than other comparative nations where we fared the best. Thank Joe when you see him.
How are they better off when they are paying $709 more per month for the same stuff? Guess you millionaires don’t get it.

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Real wages are flat to 2019. Wages have kept pace. I know you like to pretend everything is bad but on the whole people are better off. They are way better off than other comparative nations where we fared the best. Thank Joe when you see him.

I'll thank him to take a long walk on a short pier (and you can join him).

Gas up.

Prices up.

Thanks Joe.
 

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