Senator Dorgan is sounding the With our country up to our neck in trade debt―$2 billion a day―as we import energy and export jobs, it is long past the time to tackle the trade crisis head-on.
By outsourcing hundreds of thousands of U.S. jobs, American companies are essentially hollowing out our economic base, and with the current White House beholden to Big Oil and cronies straight out of the Gilded Age, no one is guarding the rights of the American worker. Take This Job and Ship It is not just a dire warning―it also offers many sobering cures before our current policies put American national security even further at risk.
A very good, informative read on the damage that shipping American jobs overseas has done to the economy and the quality of goods that we are buying today. Dorgan puts a lot of good information into his book, and writes it in a way that is easy to understand (not going to lie, I tend to find books about economics boring). He also offers some practical solutions to solve the problem, but unfortunately that would require the US to have corporations willing to just be profitable (not obscenely profitable) and politicians who were not in the back pocket of Giant Corporations. Fat chance of that happening... I did find parts of the book hard to read as there was just a lot of information to process, but overall, this book gets 4 stars and I think more people should read it.
Senator Dorgan paints a matter-of-fact picture in this book about what we don't see in business, economics, and what's happening to America. This book is NOT for everyone, but if you've ever been fed up with companies like Wal-Mart, or with a phone call to a "help desk" that gets routed to Bombay, then you will enjoy this read.
Awesome! This book described in detail the many economic and political issues of our nation and a formidable political solution to correct. Our economic status was created by legislative actions created by egregious corporate greed in our two leading parties during a period of increasing monopolization by large corporations. This unchecked monopolization must be legislated to provide more opportunities for the fast declining middle class. The middle class is the core of the greatest wealth of our nation. It is now we the voters who must wake up and see what is happening to our nation and our society. We are fast declining as a leading nation to one that is becoming a second tier nation. We live in a world of fiction. We must wake up to through informed and factual information sources to save our nation. We must think and VOTE accordingly.
This was one of those I just picked up on a whim while I was strolling through the library. It deals with our idiotic “trade policies” and how badly we’re being harmed by them. It’s definitely a relevant book and I can relate to it personally, having had my last job outsourced and seeing that my current one is ripe to be at any time. It’s a very informative but infuriating book; I got so mad sometimes it was hard to read. He’s a Democrat so he spent most of his time bashing Republicans, but he let Clinton have it pretty good too. And his wrath for Wal-Mart knows no bounds. I think I’m back to not wanting to ever shop at Wal-Mart. Great book, something everybody should read but most people wouldn’t want to.
This book was terrific. Senator Dorgan goes into detail about specific corporations, businessmen, and politicians who are ruining our government and our economy by putting their personal wealth in front of ethics, human rights, labor standards, environmental standards, ideas of fair play, and people in general.
The soul and future of our country is at stake and I love Dorgan being up front and honest about what is wrong and how to fix it. That being said, I'm going to read a book presently the other side although I must say that the evidence presented by Dorgan is pretty damning. Every American should read this book.
I read this book during the "reflection years" - my introspective time prior to a midlife crisis, where I started questioning everything that I ever stood for, particularly my politics.
This book was good reinforcement of ideas that I already had about corporate greed, political corruption and the very wealthy - there wasn't really anything within that was particularly compelling or that I did not already know, but rather...just affirmation.
I don't regret reading the book. It served its purpose.
This is a book every American citizen should read and every legislator should read before any election. Many people voting Republican have no idea of how the Republicans, in bed with Corporate America, are screwing the middle class and working class up the ass while laughing all the way to the bank. Read this to see where jobs have gone and who has benefited. He also provides proof for each statement. You owe it to yourself to know what your political leaders are purposely doing to you and how your vote can stop it.
This was an insightful book that I enjoyed because it challenged my own thinking on trade, deficits, and economics in general. It was especially timely as we have shifted focus to protecting our manufacturing sector, getting tough on trade, and bringing jobs home. It’s a good read, and reminds us the struggles rural America, and some of the cities hollowed out by free trade faced, but also gives real answers to how to fix it. Not the demagoguery Trump provided, I hope other liberals take the time to read this, and add it to national politics .
Excellent book, and a good juxtaposition to several better known books on globalization and free trade. Senator Dorgan (D-ND) makes a number of salient and well reasoned arguments. I read this bood with special interest and reccomend that it be read with other current popular economic books such as "The World is Flat".
Dorgan’s book shows the importance of people being engaged in work that produces things and the dire consequences of the unemployed and effects on the family, self-esteem, crime. The book hints that the problem stems from corruption and insider trading. The U.S. representatives have sold out the country and hollowed it.
A very clear account packed with real factual details and sound reasoning accessible to those not living in the scholastic stratosphere of abstract economic speculation or the back rooms of predatory corporate elites.
This book provided another perspective of the longer term impacts of shipping jobs oversees to reduce cost short term. Wonderful strategic, thought-provoking book.