Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Going Rural


In the 1960s and 1970s, when the US had manufacturing plants, these plants were mostly located in rural counties in Right to Work States.  When NAFTA was approved in 1993, we heard the “great sucking sound” as our manufacturing jobs were off-shored to foreign countries.

When the US embarked on UN Agenda 21 implementation, we started with George HW Bush signing on to the Rio Accords, Bill Clinton sending the Executive Order to all Agencies to prepare and Obama’s implementation orders. UN Agenda 21 called for the US population to move from all rural counties to enable the government to implement the “Wilding Project” and into “Mega-Cities.  We also needed to reduce the global population from 8 billion to 500 million.

We elected Trump in 2016 and work on implementing UN Agenda 21 has stalled. But the Executive Orders and Laws created to implement UN Agenda 21 have not been repealed.

In the meantime, we squandered a fortune on “being green” and our big cities are a wreck. Traffic is miserable and so are the politicians.

But now we have manufacturing moving back and I propose we move it back to the rural counties it abandoned after 1993. Land costs and taxes are cheaper and rural living brings less traffic and more friends.

If the manufacturing includes Engineering support or Design, the best place for it is in one of the suburbs that surround the big cities.  Engineers prefer to settle where there is lots of engineering work. They prefer not to move their families when the need to change companies.

Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader


1 comment:

Priscilla King said...

Kingsport, Tennessee, would like to be a factory town again. They think they want to attract a few billionnaires. Does not be happening. Great-Aunt Oily McFilthy's children have sunk to being mere millionnaires, and still say "KINGSport!" with dainty little shudders. If I lived in Kingsport and saw any hope of JPS coming back, I'd be cavorting with joy by now.