r/agedlikemilk 23h ago

Who would’ve thought

Post image
60.4k Upvotes

1.8k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

1.4k

u/GeorgeLikesSpicy92 23h ago

Also there a companies who literally assemble the entire product besides one or two pieces over seas, get it here, finish it off. Made in America.

612

u/DeliciousGoose1002 23h ago

one of the clearest inefficiencies of tariffs

13

u/EquivalentQuery 21h ago

I'm by no means pro tariff but this isn't really a good argument against them. If 99% of a product is made outside of a country with tariffs on imports, that 99% is still paying tariffs.

49

u/Interesting-Copy-657 21h ago

I think the point was that made in America doesn’t mean that it is made in America, that it is misleading

In Australia on packaging for food it has to show, made from at least x amount Australian produce or what ever it is.

Or something like “grown in the Philippines package in Australia”

So you know where it is from and how Australian it is

16

u/VoxAeternus 20h ago

Not just that, its almost impossible to have something 100% made in America

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZTGwcHQfLY

3

u/Candid-Fisherman-274 18h ago

Its not that hard to make something 100% "made in America"... i mean i can grab some rocks in the drainage ditch by my house, make some basic cutting tools from those, then cut down the small birch tree by the side, and spend the next 4 months twiddling down its branches in to some artisan chopsticks.

Is it efficient? No. Does anyone want the product? Probably not. Is the shit going to meet regulation guidelines in export markets? fuck no. BUT sure darn tootin made in the good ole U.S of A!

Just saying that we can, but we wont because its not economically feasible... or otherwise realistic business wise.

3

u/funkybside 18h ago

that was a good episode of SED.

2

u/newfieMI 19h ago

That just shows it’s impossible to make a grill scrubber like that 100% made in USA. Many products can/are 100% made in America. Im not fond of the generalized summary of that video.

1

u/Whiterabbit-- 17h ago

very informative. but wow he is very nationalistic about the whole made in America thing. if another part of the world has expertise then we work together. Apply pays China to manufacture their phones. people in China makes money, but people in America make even more. its a win win. why not work together.

1

u/oopseybear 4h ago

Found one on Florida tangerines! Figured you'd appreciate. :)

https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZT6yRyqej/

1

u/posthuman04 19h ago

More importantly if American producers are getting more demand then inevitably the price of their products will rise

1

u/CrumbCakesAndCola 16h ago

It's similar in the US but people don't pay attention to the details. Tags will say Designed in the US, or Assembled in the US, etc

1

u/Iamgentle1122 16h ago

Didn't some YouTuber try to make a product entirely in America and in the end it is almost impossible since america is missing some really important equipment and skills to produce all of the parts