As much as I’d like to not advertise any single media source, CNN scored the sit down interview so it is what it is.
https://www.cnn.com/politics/live-news/harris-walz-trump-election-08-29-24/index.html
It’s live right now, will be interesting to see what people think!
More:
https://www.cnn.com/2024/08/29/politics/kamala-harris-tim-walz-cnntv/index.html
“Why did it take 3 1/2 years to do anything on immigration?”
LOL.
CNN wants people to think they haven’t been doing anything.
But she has.
And it’s working.
Bet with more even more investment they wouldn’t even need the Border Deal that Trump killed.
Backstopping Coca-Cola and the United Fruit Company. Feel like I’m telling Sam Adams that we got a big new investment from East India Tea.
It’s crazy to me that ‘convincing American businesses to move some production to an underdeveloped nation’ is being thrown around like it’s a good thing.
I mean, the Marshall Plan was kind of a good thing. Rebuilding Japan and the half of South Korea we hadn’t completely flattened a good thing.
But are we talking about developing enormous new blocks of housing, schooling, transport, and hospitalization in these countries? Or is Target just expanding the sweatshops?
Imagine the North coming in after the Civil War and building more plantations…
Oh, if they proposed something like the Marshall Plan I’d be fucking pleased.
This is just convincing US companies to take advantage of the cheap labor, as if they really needed that much convincing.
Labor is cheaper overseas. The Philippines, Indonesia, and Bangladesh have people working in what amount to little more than slave camps. Latin American governments struggle harder to keep their populations in line, as evidenced by socialist uprisings in Nicaragua, Cuba, Bolivia, and Venezuela.
I think we’re in agreement. “Kamala leads a 4.5 gagillion dollars in private investment in central america” might as well read “American companies exploit central-American destabilization by securing their cheap labor”
It’s not a policy we should be celebrating as a success.
What a crazy coincidence that the policy in question specifically excluded Nicaragua, Cuba, and Venezuela lol