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OSHA would have a field day there. I wonder how many guys are missing toes. One guy didn't even have any socks on. Then there's the lady operating the winch. If that cable breaks under tension she is lined up perfectly to loose her head. Very sad when you see the horrible working and living conditions in some other countries.

Last edited by Dave Zucal
Hot Water posted:
Professor Chaos posted:

How wonderful to be in a country where big government doesn't destroy the coal industry with regulations!

So,,,,,,,the extremely low price, and abundance of, natural gas had nothing to do with it? 

Nope.

And China is also importing coal from various countries, including 40 million tons from the US in the first six months of this year.

Rusty

Last edited by Rusty Traque

Like the steam of the 1990's, these are disappearing quickly.  In five years, China created 64 MILLION jobs with a goal of creating 10 million a year until 2020.  Most of that is to support internal growth, as the middle class in China is exploding.  When I walked through massive toy markets in Guangzhou last November, perhaps 40 percent of the toys were marketed for domestic; so you saw bins of toy F-14 Tomcats beside toy J-20 (Chinese) stealth fighters. The US government agency I worked for at the time (National Weather Service) has about 5,500 employees and maybe another 1,000 contractors.  The Chinese Meteorological Agency has 50,000 employees and 19,000 contractors. They have massive amounts of money (most of which used to be ours), are investing in technology and infrastructure like crazy and supporting outreach into the developing world like the US did in the 1960's.  

Their high population, low labor costs can be a real plus.  For now, and from what I've seen the government is allowing quite loose capitalism take advantage of this to fuel growth (and the resulting pollution and dangerous working conditions) that would stagger most Americans.  

In China, if your personal skills and talents make one in a million, there are a 1000 people just like you. 

Interesting place.  I hope GE is watching carefully; attempts to break into the US locomotive market when it comes back from the current slide would not surprise me.

Bob

 

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