Comment on Trump Calls Anti-Tariff People 'Fools,' Promises $2K Dividends
shads@lemy.lol 3 days agoSo I ask out of serious curiosity, when you say over regulation, are we talking safety, environmental, financial?
I ask because the willingness of companies to pay workers in another country to engage in practices that are prohibited in the first country seems like corporate exploitation.
If it’s due to environmental regulation that seems to be a case where often an environmentally friendlier way of performing a lot of processes exists, but it costs more money, so companies choose to exploit weaker regulation somewhere that hasn’t caught up to not poisoning the planet to benefit companies. Plus a lot of companies hate being told to clean up after themselves and would prefer to simply leave an area once they have extracted maximum value from it.
As for financial, look, I am Australian, here we have historically benefitted from a strong labour movement that has granted us livable wages, paid sick leave etc, however our rich people are doing everything in their power to roll back and undermine that.
In each case the problem seems in my opinion to revolve around a class of extremely wealthy shitheels who want to make all the money and they will take the path of least resistance to make that happen. Perhaps, Internationally we need to view the existence of billionaires as a critical failure of our systems and either legislate to prevent them from occurring, or find some way to drastically increase the hazard levels associated with trying to gather that much wealth in the first place.
I personally doubt that Tariffs will meaningfully change the manufacturing landscape internationally, I think Trump tanking the US economy will however increase desperation and lead US citizens to compromise on the conditions they will work under, in effect lowering the expectations of US workers to the point they will be willing to compete with off shore workers.
Snatchdaddy@hilariouschaos.com 3 days ago
You make some really valid points about corporate exploitation and the ways regulations interact with global labor practices. I agree that a lot of the problem comes down to extremely wealthy individuals chasing profit at all costs—they often exploit gaps in regulation or weaker protections abroad rather than innovate responsibly at home.
When I talk about “overregulation,” I mean it broadly—safety, environmental, and financial. From my experience, some of those rules, while well-intentioned, made it cheaper and easier for companies to shift operations overseas rather than comply domestically. I’m not saying the rules themselves are bad, but the system doesn’t always balance worker protection with keeping industry viable in the U.S.
I get what you’re saying about tariffs—they’re not a perfect solution, and they won’t magically bring back manufacturing. My point is more that some form of economic pressure or policy to make domestic labor competitive again is necessary. Otherwise, you’re right—workers get forced to lower their standards to compete globally, and that just perpetuates exploitation rather than fixing it.
On billionaires, I agree completely. When a handful of people can accumulate that much wealth while dismantling the livelihoods of millions, the system is failing. I don’t have all the answers for that, but I think policies that make companies accountable for the human and economic cost of their decisions—whether through taxation, labor protections, or regulating how much CEOs can extract—would at least begin to address it.