
SouthSIDE Glen
independentrecording.net
Once again, history holds the answer. And that answer is, that's just a rehash of old prejudiced paranoia a few times over...TheDewd said:I wholeheartedly agree with that.
But what will happen to us then?
WE will be the ones starving
"Americans" complained about the same thing with "loss" of the manufacture of the transistor radio in the late 60s/early 70s.
Then it was the "loss" of television manufacture in the late 70s/early 80s.
Then it was the - if not the loss, the loss of the monopoly - of the automobile industry in the mid 80s.
Then came a similar trend with computer manufacture in the 90s.
Now it is the lost of the customer service industry.
There is a common denominator though all of this. It's all the natural evolution of technology and manufacture. Each of these technologies were - if not necessarily invented - matured and a mass market developed here. Once the market is mature and the technology becomes a commodity, the manufacturing moves to less-R&D-inovative countries and eventually to second-and third-world countries where manufacturing costs can be minimized because of the lack of R&D costs. In the meantime we move on to The Next Big Thing. There's nothing abnormal about that, it's the natural economic cycle of the global economy.
And there is, in fact, a certain amount of built-in self-security (though only to a point) in such global sharing of the wealth. It's the poor, the down-trodden and disrespected in other countries that cause the greatest long-term threat to global economic security. If we kept everything to ourselves and treated everybody else as Oliver Twist, we'd be stabbing ourselves in the economic back. As the globe goes, so do we.
The biggest danger is when we bcome lazy and lose our innovative edge. Japan gave us an economic and creative run for our money in the 80s, but our ability to innovate and adapt combined with our deep economic pockets gave us the personal computer, the Internet industry and vastly improved automobile quality, while giving Japan a deep recession in return. But there are a couple of disturbing trends now, and the disturbing trends are coming from within, not without.
First is that we have an increasing value system in this country that de-emphasizes the perceived value of both hard work and education. We have become too lazy or hoity toity to mow our own lawns or make our own food; we refuse to work at blue-collar or minimum wage jobs because we think we deserve better than that. And then we complain when foreigners come here and do the work for us or when our jobs wind up being exported overseas because we price ourselves right out of the market.
At the same time we are losing the education resources of our own colleges to those with student visas from other countries because we find it easier to play the pro ball player lottery at the age of 18 than we do to get a Bachelor's or Master's at the age of 20 or 21. We have - by any measure - the best colleges in the world, but we're exporting all our best education to students from other countries. The old cycle of "innovate more technology here, then export the matured industry there" is threatened to be usurped by all the Masters and PhD degrees going back overseas and all the money those countries are pouring into bleeding-edge R&D now.
But that's all not *their* fault. How can blame them? If we lose it'll be our fault for getting greedy and lazy. I can guarantee you that your average 20-year-old home recc'r in Korea or Japan is not looking for an Easy Button to do their mastering, or even looking for "mastering software". They learn the art and the science of audio engineering inside-out and then apply it creatively to the problem. They know there is no such thing as an "Easy Button", and frankly they are just fine with that, and laugh at us when we think different.
Xstatic is right. Country of origin is no guarantee of quality of worker. I couldn't get a neighbor kid to shovel my snow in the winter to make a few bucks if my life depended upon it. And the ones who do do their own driveways more often than not do a sloppy-assed job of it. And they want me to hire them as an AE or intern for my work here? Not a chance. I don't hire slack-asses. Give me a kid who offers to do my driveway for free in exchange for an opportunity to help me out in the studio, and I'll give you the next Warren Buffet or Bill Gates.
I mentioned in my first post that my Chevy Impala was assembled in Mexico. The plant that most (all?) Impalas are currently assembled is the same one in Mexico that the Buick LaCrosses are manufactured at. This assembly plant (as we've all in the States have seen in the TV commercials for the LaCrosse) has been rated by J.D. Powers as the highest-quality automobile assembly plant in North America. Of course the commercials don't bother to mention that the plant is in Mexico; they couldn't sell many cars that way any more than I could sell that Sony TV by saying the same thing. But the fact remains that the plant highest-rated in quality for assembling "American" cars is not even located in the United States. Some quality labor and QA force we have here, eh?
I'm not anti-American, not by a long shot. I'm just saying that if we "lose" to China, India, Korea or anyone else, it's our own laziness and complacence that'll be at fault, not theirs. We need to get off our asses, stop bitching and start working and studying and applying ourselves, not pretend life is a video game and think there is a free crack or an easy button for everything.
[end of rant, start of aplolgy

G.