This is one of those discussions with so many facets and interrelationships that it is possible to discuss all kinds facts and opinions and at the same time find it hard to integrate them all into a understanding of the whole.
I can't or at least won't try to attempt that here.
What I will do is point out how America's position has changed in a developing world economy.
No longer are we in a position of world economic domination with the ability to force outcomes as we set fit with much of the rest of the world.
The position we enjoyed following WWII and into the 1970's or so has been replaced with one of our declining influence and control, as the rest of the world catches up industrially, and grows toward our standard of living.
Some of the previously non-industrialized countries of the world like China, Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan, India, Mexico, and the like have come on board as producers instead of just suppliers of raw materials.
We buy goods from these countries because they can produce them for less, and then export dollars in turn to the tune of a trade deficit of 6 billion dollars a year.
Manufacturing jobs in the U.S. disappear as a result, as does the buying power and the standard of living of those workers and the rest of us. Even service jobs go overseas through the cyberspace links.
The United States must adjust to a more restrained, less dominant role in the New World Economy. We can still for the time being be the major player, but our portion will be less, and there will have to be economic and standard of living adjustments made at home.
Our perception of ourselves will have to adjust accordingly. We can't think of ourselves as being entitled to whatever portion of the world's wealth we want.
We'll also have to stop trying to be the policeman to the rest of the world. We've done this largely for our own economic interests since WWII, justifying it in on moral grounds, but now we're finding that it is too expensive and doesn't usually work anyway.
It's a smaller America we're going to have to learn to live with, but one that is no less great and one in which we can be no less proud.
We can find some solace in the fact that some of the rest of the people of the world are having a better life, more like ours.
ON EDIT: The irony of all of this is that we used to spend a lot of time saying we were working to help the undeveloped countries of the world become modernized/industrialized (we really gave them foreign aid to help our own business, economic, and military interests), and now that some of them have become industrialized, they are fierce competitors with us in a world economy!
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One point of view, not the whole explanation, just part of the picture.
The above discussion is worth-
A. 0 cents
B. 1 cent
C. 2 cents
D. 3 cents
E. 5 cents but no cigar, it's an inflated world.
Joe. :teeth :thup