" very good chance that ai/robotics manufacturing is gonna explode in the u.s. to replace human labor. "
Nothing I have seen so far from Trump and the rural industrial bourgeoisie indicate that they have the intellectual capability to reboot and rebuild domestic industrial engineering and manufacturing. I think this initial attempt at deg…
" very good chance that ai/robotics manufacturing is gonna explode in the u.s. to replace human labor. "
Nothing I have seen so far from Trump and the rural industrial bourgeoisie indicate that they have the intellectual capability to reboot and rebuild domestic industrial engineering and manufacturing. I think this initial attempt at deglobalization will be a humiliating failure. There are too many hidden technological dependencies. There are no robotic millwrights yet. The current AI tech are mostly just linguistic chamelions, not genuine agents of mechanical, electronic and chemical engineering
Also, our current industrial workforce is seriously degraded. I have worked alongside young people attempting to work in factories and they have flailed at repairing complex machinery and retreated from the harsh environment back to playing videogames in their parents home.
A further indication of the incapability and desperation of the current US industrial base is the recent acquiescence of US Steel to be acquired by Nippon Steel. Both management and labor realize they are not up to the job of reconstruction and must accept offshore help, in spite of the profound desire for domestic control and self-determination.
" very good chance that ai/robotics manufacturing is gonna explode in the u.s. to replace human labor. "
Nothing I have seen so far from Trump and the rural industrial bourgeoisie indicate that they have the intellectual capability to reboot and rebuild domestic industrial engineering and manufacturing. I think this initial attempt at deglobalization will be a humiliating failure. There are too many hidden technological dependencies. There are no robotic millwrights yet. The current AI tech are mostly just linguistic chamelions, not genuine agents of mechanical, electronic and chemical engineering
Also, our current industrial workforce is seriously degraded. I have worked alongside young people attempting to work in factories and they have flailed at repairing complex machinery and retreated from the harsh environment back to playing videogames in their parents home.
well there you go.
A further indication of the incapability and desperation of the current US industrial base is the recent acquiescence of US Steel to be acquired by Nippon Steel. Both management and labor realize they are not up to the job of reconstruction and must accept offshore help, in spite of the profound desire for domestic control and self-determination.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/interactive/2025/zito-us-steel-nippon-steel-west-mifflin/