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October 14, 2009

Sweet-smelling Giant

America, according to some sources, has a $14 trillion economy. That's our GNP, or GDP (Gross Domestic Product) as it's now called - "the total value of all a nation's goods and services produced during a specified period". But does a $14 trillion GDP make the United States a "strong" nation? No.

GDP alone doesn't make a nation "strong". A nation that produces $14 trillion in straw hats will be less strong than one which produces half that dollar figure in locomotives. The complexities of a locomotive industry assumes railroad technology, engineering, and manufacturing feats unknown to the straw hat kingdom.

Heavy industry which can be converted to war production - in a world that still goes to war - or other tangible national goals is potential strength. The economic conversion which supposedly put the screws to doctrinaire Marxism - the rise of the service industry - is also the crow on the cradle of American industrial power. We've narrowed our industrial shoulders; we're rich, but we can't buy security. Don't even ask where "green jobs" fit into this puzzle.

One of my former lives was in manufacturing; manufacturing of the kind that was done in the 18th and 19th centuries and survived almost unchanged into the middle 1960's. Foundry work with hot metal. We exported these miserable, hot, dirty and dangerous jobs to Asia, beginning in the 1940's, and only continued the processes here in the US that could be automated or made acceptably safe. We stopped manufacturing a lot of stuff here in the US, and that presents a supply problem.

Remember when the US oil patch tipped over in the 1980's? One of the ancillary problems of a defunct user of heavy durable goods like those used in the oil-extraction business is that the remaining US suppliers of these items simply go out of business. When they do, the pipes and impellers, shackles, swing arms, valves and chains and hundreds of other drilling-rig systems are gone from inventory, maybe forever. Drill now, drill here makes sense, but there are logistical limitations. You just don't start pumping. You have to re-build the industries that build the pumping equipment.

There probably isn't a major sand-casting foundry in this country that isn't already flush with defense contracts and automotive work. We don't have enough of them, I'm sure. If you've ever seen one of these places or worked in one, as I have, you'll understand the modernist's urge to do away with them, along with drop forges and rolling mills and steel furnaces - the dark satanic mills of Blake's imaginings - the places where hot metal was manipulated, poured, hammered and machined to produce heavy goods.

It's said that no one wants to do that work anymore. It's certainly true that the mush heads under the mortar board hats in the current and previous administrations do not consider those jobs "good jobs", due to the dumb confusion that dignity is something that is hung on the outside of the man by a government agency and a labor law. But contending with an 80-pound ladle of 1400-degree molten aluminum, to pour a mold for a water-pump housing is a damn sight better than standing in line for Obama Money.

Somewhere we went wrong, and we took the first steps a generation ago. We thought we could be strong and still have clean fingernails. We argued that education makes the person whole and muscle applied to real labor only employs half a human being, that knowledge of Karl Jung was more valuable than the ability to sharpen a drill bit, that our men should pump iron in a glass storefront rather than in a place that had a noon whistle and a loading dock. The world of solid objects isn't kind to the effete. We'll learn.

16 comments:

Kid said...

Rhod. Yes, like chess - every guarded square given up by a pawn represents an opportunity square for your opponent.

Here's a couple steel city stories.
My brother went to Penn State Univ, then came back and went to work for J&L steel in Alliquipa, PA. His first job was to hop inside the coke furnaces and chip the slag off the walls with a heavy metal implement. They'd toss in a 2X10 for him to stand on and when it caught fire after a few minutes, they pull it out and toss in a fresh one.

His buddy was working in the rod and wire section one day and happened to move his hand right in front the opening where the red hot wire comes of out to be collected onto spools. The wire came out at that very moment and went through the middle of his hand and he had to keep his hand perfectly still to avoid having the wire re-directed away from the collector spool and wind all around his body instead.
Took a bit of time. 5 minutes or so, but the wound was obviously cauterized as a result.

As early 20 somethings, we rented the second floor of a house where the occupant of the third floor was a dude that smoked about a pound of reefer a day and his job at J&L was to drive the 100 ton buckets of molten steel around the mill and pour it into various things that then processed it into plates or wire or whatever. The whole building shook like satan being awakened from a bad dream when he rolled through they tell me.

Rushter said...

I'll ask again as I really feel because I did not know about your site that you should have my domain name - www.itdontmakesense.com - it is an easy change that I can handle completely on my end and I ask for nothing in return. Your site is great I am an avid reader daily and you beat me to the punch. Please email me about this. Thanks,
Scott

Anonymous said...

Rhod, you never cease to amaze me at how you think about and observe things. I literally learn something new about every time you post, and I thank you for that.

I have had my thoughts and mixed emotions about the loss of our manufacturing base. I am not as pessimistic about it as you are (I have been influenced by Walter Williams here), but there are clear concerns. It does matter what a nation produces. What it produces has to be valuable, or it is in economic decline. As more of us move into the govt. sector, by definition, we are not productive.

I think the key commodity in the national and world economy is still ingenuity. We've got plenty of this. It's just taxed, regulated, and shackled in a million ways.

For what it's worth, I have never worked in manufacturing, but I have cut more grass than any one you know.

The larger point of your post about the dangerous softness of the nation (and the value of hard, manual labor) is so dead on. "The world of solid objects isn't kind to the effete. We'll learn." LOL.

Anonymous said...

Scott,

This is a site of solid objects that is not kind to the effete.

Anonymous said...

I figure If I wait long enough, kinda playing hard-to-get, Scott will convince Emi to gift me the thing for Christmas.

Anonymous said...

Isn't Scott & Emi the Captain and Tenille?

Tell him you want Muskrat Love on ITunes, and then we'll talk.

Velcro said...

Working in "higher ed" as some call it, I was frankly puzzled by what they said was coming after the "information age" (which came after the "industrial age" you're lamenting): sustainability.

Sustainability? What is that about? What does that MEAN? After further review, I've concluded that it represents another step in the retreat you are talking about. We are having a hard time hanging on to what we have. I'm not talking about the "green" BS, but economically. Boy have we gone south!

Opus #6 said...

Rhod, when the effeminate man rules, the warrior mentality and the concept of an honest day's labor goes out of style. At least in the hunker-in-the-bunker White House.

Scott, what Nickie forgot to tell you is that he is under contract with blogspot.com for another 1.5 years. After that, he may choose to re negotiate his contract or not. I suggest checking back with him then, when he will be at liberty to change blogger platforms and cell phone companies all at once.

Anonymous said...

For years I have lamented the disappearance of the romantic heroes of my youth... the Warrior poets, the bronzed smithies.

I am no longer part of a nation of noble leaders and sweaty lifters. All that is asked of me is to graze quietly in the company of other sheep.

MRMacrum said...

Now that we have reduced ourselves to a nation of WalMart shoppers and paper pushers, our multi trillion dollar economy is nothing but a kind of ponzi scheme that is now beginning to show the negative return it was bound to show eventually. Excellent post on this.

I came from a a family of professionals. Doctors, Lawyers, Military officers, Corporate ladder climbers, Judges are found throughout my family. I was the first member of my family in many generations to turn their back on "white collar" pursuits and make my way in the blue collar world. Right out of college I began driving trucks and have never once in the ensuing 36 years worn a tie to work or sat behind a desk in some cubicle. What I did do was wear out my body busting my hump and getting the satisfaction that only manual labor can give a man. We all pick our poison and I am so very grateful for the type I picked. I would not change a thing. But I wish our country would. There is dignity in all work.

INCOMING!!!!!!! said...

Rhod,

well put. The dangers we face of divorcing from real process, real things and real danger is that "Faith and Belief" take over and corrupt real life.

You can believe whatever you like about bridge building but when it comes to buidling one and letting real people walk over it, it kind of concentrates the mind and blows away all the crap. Especially if the thing collapses and kills a load of people. Their families won't give a flying one about your beliefs or faith.

In the Service/Info economy there are no such obvious tests of real life. Indeed it is easily/deliberatley conflated with brain washing and cult practice.

That's what's wrong now and that's why real work rooted in real experience is never coming back to the West. We've entered the age of the occult again.

Rhod said...

TK, you didn't describe "coke", which was/is (as you know) coal burned in a vacuum; the residue is light, viscous and can be burned hot again for high temps. Every rail bed in the northeast in the 1950's had a ribbon of coke and coal along the sides, spilled from RR tenders. Your larger point might overturn mine - mill work is terrible.

Velcro, The Information Age is the kind of moron labelling that Will and Ariel Durant raised to an art.

DC,thank you as always. Williams, I think, claims that the percentage of "manufacturing jobs" to service jobs is near what it was forty years ago. So do some conservative talk radio hosts. The percentage only matters if what we manufacture is the same.

Opus, the White House has systems to remove the estrogen from the air and pump it harmlessly to Truth101's intravenous supply.

Goomba's digs is under the spreading chestnut tree, where the village blogger sits. Where did he get an image of two guys with ladles?

MRM, thank you for your choices. Up here in the northeast, the children of Boomers sometimes take the same path, set up by mom and dad making hand-built wooden boats and Shaker furniture. Somehow that isn't the same, though.

Incoming, I left dirty work in the very early 1970's to program large mainframe computers for the sorcerers of the insurance industry in Hartford. I'm still washing my hands.

Rhod said...

Correction. Coke is glassified, not viscous.

Kid said...

Rhod, I may have it wrong myself. It was an oven or furnace of some nature and the slag had to go. Doesn't change the job much I guess.

Nor your point that we will become a nation of lost skills and far too dependent.

Rhod said...

I wasn't correcting you, TK. Your account was very interesting, and it probably was a coke furnace. I'd say that most people don't even know what that kind of coke is.

TS/WS said...
This comment has been removed by the author.