[sparkscoffee] Re: Emailing: Scan0129

  • From: "" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "Sblumen123@xxxxxxx" for DMARC)
  • To: sparkscoffee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 2 Sep 2014 13:30:55 -0400 (EDT)

DR
You and most on this net is way smarter then me when operating computers.  
Hard for an old dog like
me to learn new tricks. I take it you endorsed my view on Free  Trade 
Agreements which ends up
outsourcing our jobs and bad for our country? Many thanks.
 
Stanley, the protectionist socialist  
 
 
In a message dated 9/1/2014 3:09:54 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
n1ea@xxxxxxxx writes:

Stanley,  


If you searched google and found out which think tanks agreed with you,  
you would be shocked at who they were.  There are many who disagreed with  
this and agreed with you.


It's easier to send the article than a scan of the article.  Here's  the 
article.


       

 
 


 
Posted on Sun, Aug. 31,  2014
Trade deal could cost us jobs, wages
BY DREW MARTIN & BILL EBERHARDT
_district3.cwa-union.org_ 
(https://mail.google.com/mail/?view=cm&fs=1&tf=1&to=district3.cwa-union.org)  
 


MARTIN

Each year, Labor Day serves as a reminder of the  contributions that 
American workers have made to our country’s  strength, prosperity and 
well-being. 
It falls around the time that  members of Congress start to return from 
recess in their districts  to Washington, D.C. This Labor Day, we want our 
representatives to  get back to work with one thing in mind: Their first 
priority 
must  be to protect Florida’s quality of life, including our jobs,  wages, 
communities and environment.  
Sadly, members of Congress — and the public they are supposed  to represent 
— are being left out of important talks about a trade  deal that could end 
up costing us our jobs and wages while  jeopardizing our clean air and 
water. 
That deal, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP, is a massive  trade pact 
being negotiated behind closed doors between the United  States and 11 other 
countries — including Mexico, Canada, Japan  and Vietnam. 
Trade can be a good thing if done responsibly. But what we know  from a 
history of failed free-trade pacts, and from what we’ve  seen in leaked 
chapters of the trade text, the TPP will lead us in  the wrong direction by 
off-shoring our jobs, eroding our wages,  gutting environmental and consumer 
protections, and increasing our  exposure to unsafe food. 
We already know that so-called “free” trade agreements aren’t  free — 
they hurt jobs and wages and are deeply irresponsible.  Indeed, just two past “
free” trade deals, NAFTA and China’s  addition to the World Trade 
Organization, resulted in a net loss  of almost 135,000 Florida jobs. In 
addition, 
when — and if — those  workers got another job, their annual wages plummeted 
an average  $13,500. That net loss cost Florida’s economy almost $2 billion 
in  annual wages. The TPP will make things even worse because we’ll be  
competing with corporations relocating to countries like Vietnam,  where the 
average minimum wage is a meager 56 cents per hour. 
This agreement will allow foreign corporations to sue the  United States 
through international tribunals over nearly any laws  that they allege would 
cut into their expected future profits.  That includes laws designed to 
protect the air we breathe, the  water we drink, and the food on our dinner 
tables. Florida’s  taxpayers shouldn’t have to pay the tab to defend American 
laws  against foreign corporations using secret court systems. 
And it gets worse. A number of groups, including AARP and  Consumers Union, 
wrote a letter stating that the TPP would lead to  higher prescription drug 
prices, placing important Medicare and  Medicaid programs at risk. The 
higher drug prices are the product  of language in the TPP that extends the 
patent monopolies held by  big drug companies. 
Even the food you eat is not safe. The FDA has detained  hundreds of 
seafood products from TPP countries due to salmonella  and E. coli. The TPP 
will 
further swamp an FDA that is only able  to inspect 2 percent of seafood 
imports under current conditions.  If the TPP becomes a reality, more cheap and 
tainted food imports  are likely to make it to our shelves, sinking Florida’s 
shrimping  businesses that provide us with a safe and healthy catch. 
It comes as no surprise that the American people are not fooled  by these 
irresponsible trade agreements. According to a bipartisan  poll ( 
_fasttrackpoll.info_ (http://fasttrackpoll.info/) ), 62 percent of voters 
oppose  
giving President Obama “fast track” authority over the TPP. With  fast track, 
Congress would not be allowed to make any changes to  the deal before it’s 
signed. This is such a bad deal that 43  percent of voters — including 68 
percent of Republicans, 17  percent of Democrats, and 48 percent of 
Independents —
 said that  they would be less likely to vote for a member of Congress who  
supported fast track. 
The legislative fight over the TPP may come to a head during  the lame-duck 
session following the November elections, when  members are expected to 
introduce a new proposal for fast  track. 
We hope that each member of the Florida congressional  delegation will join 
us in the fight to protect our jobs, wages,  environment, food, 
prescription drugs, health and national  sovereignty, and show their support 
for 
responsible trade, by  making a public commitment to oppose fast tracking the  
Trans-Pacific Partnership. 
Drew Martin is the conservation chair of the  Sierra Club’s Loxahatchee 
Group. Bill Eberhardt is the Florida  legislative-political coordinator for the 
Communications Workers  of  America.






 
____________________________________
©  2014 Miami Herald Media Company. All Rights Reserved.
_http://www.miamiherald.com_ (http://www.miamiherald.com/)   

Read  more here: 
http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/08/31/v-print/4317187/trade-deal-could-cost-us-jobs.html#storylink=cpy



David



On Mon, Sep 1, 2014 at 1:35 PM, Redacted sender _Sblumen123@aol.com_ 
(mailto:Sblumen123@xxxxxxx)  for DMARC <_dmarc-noreply@freelists.org_ 
(mailto:dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx) > wrote:


Everyone
Do you remember the Think Tanks telling you that Free Trade Agreements  
With Level Playing Fields was good for American Jobs and then afterwards  that 
a Servicing Economy was a natural evolution and that
Americans didn't want to work in factories anyway and that Made In  China 
was fighting Inflation? Looks
like we never learn and history keeps repeating itself. I disagree with  
President Obama on this one.
 
Stanley B. 
 
 
 
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