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Political Gabfest

Slate: Michigan Live Gabfest Questions

Political Gabfest

Slate Podcasts

Politics, Government, News

4.58.3K Ratings

🗓️ 11 November 2010

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The question and answer session from the Slate Political Gabfest recorded live on November 10th, 2010 in An Arbor, Michigan Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

So that is it for the Slate Plotical Gab Fest or the main portion of the show.

0:03.8

And now we'll look forward to a few of your questions.

0:06.5

Please go to the microphones if you have any questions.

0:09.3

And I see some people moving now.

0:11.7

Either that or they want to leave the hall immediately.

0:16.4

And yes, sir.

0:20.0

Mr. Plotz mentioned that when you talk about American business,

0:24.4

you shouldn't just speak about the financial industry.

0:28.1

There are the Fortune 500, and I would add,

0:30.5

they're the Fortune 500 companies and other things besides the financial industry.

0:36.5

Now, my question addresses joblessness, which has, of course,

0:41.2

dogged the Democratic Party, and they've done what they can with fiscal and monetary policy for that.

0:48.0

But what they haven't done is to either request or demand that Fortune 500 companies repatriate jobs

0:58.9

or create jobs to take the place of all the jobs that they have offshoreed for the last two

1:05.8

decades. So what I want to know is why do you think that the Democratic Party or people in the media

1:13.3

like yourselves have not brought up the possibility of pressuring Fortune 500 companies

1:19.8

in ways say that Lewis Uchitelli in his book, The Disposable American Job job loss in their and its consequences in ways that he has suggested,

1:33.8

through taxation and in other ways.

1:40.3

That's a really interesting question. Can I take that? I think the reason is that fundamentally

1:46.4

Democrats are liberal, I mean liberal in sort of the classical sense on economics, and that they

1:53.3

don't believe in that. That if you look at the main democratic economic policymakers, they

2:00.7

believe that the way America grows is through free

...

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