I've operated my one-guy wood shop for 15 years. Folks sometimes ask why it costs "so much" for me to make them a table. I tell them that if they just need a table to play cards and eat breakfast at, go get one from your store of choice for $100. But if you want one a custom size, with a distinct look, something your children can argue over when you die, where maybe you can even come by and help with the finishing, come on over and we will get it done. Most of my work is not fancy but people remain amazed that someone still does this kind of thing in Los Angeles.
In the past three years, I am surprised there are any businesses left in Los Angeles. Must be an indistinct unmarked shop with security akin to Ft. Knox.
I grew up on and inherited handmade furniture from my family. Practically no one recognizes it...let alone appreciates it, or the intellect and dexterity required to craft a chest of drawers. I sit every visiting child on a 200 year old Windsor and tell them the are seated on a work of art.
A lot of people just dont understand the value of artisan goods. The search for a pair of scissors consists of opening their amazon app and buying the cheapest one they see for $3. They use it twice, it breaks, they buy another. My family thinks I'm crazy for buying a $300 pair of handcrafted industrial tailor shears. It will last so long my ghost will be using them and I find great comfort knowing that my great grandchildren will be terrified to go near them.
As I was growing up, my dad taught me to pay attention to quality for 2 major reasons. First, he said, if you can spend $10 on a pan that lasts you a year or $20 on a pan that lasts you 5 years it should be obvious what's the better choice. But more than that, and the piece of advice that's helped me the most, is that EVERY time you use that whatever-it-is you bought, you'll experience the extra quality and be happier, instead of getting frustrated by subpar equipment/tools but you saved a few bucks. I was lucky enough to be able to thank him for that advice before he passed.
So right, I buy Al-Clad cookware, cause it's made here in USA of high quality materials. I see people buying cheap clothes that barely last of Stand up to washing. I'd rather spend $20 for a t-shirt that I know is going to last.
you are so on point for tools. For years I got cheap tools but a few years ago I sprung for a good set from Milwaukie (drill, driver, multi tool) and I will never buy a cheap tool again.
He was a wise man. I never buy the most expensive tool but I also don't buy the cheapest. Like you stated, a cheap tool will continue to fail and interrupt your workday which is lost revenue that you cannot pass on to the Consumer.
Cheap tools are great, if it’s a tool you’re only going to need a few times. Tools you rely on need to be good quality. The rj11 crimp tool I’ve used twice at work in the last 4 1/2 years? The $5 version works fine. The wire strippers, multimeter, and impact driver I use all day every day? You’d better believe I bought the highest quality I could find.
My soon to be 16yo daughter will be starting welding classes in the fall. On the other side of the row my 18yo son is honors focused on economics as a freshman at Ohio State. I'm excited for both if them and their respective journeys.
14 years ago I started down this path of entrepreneurship for building sustainable factories in Mississippi using algae as a renewable material. After 12 years we found that all of our BLOOM algae resins were being purchased for footwear brands which required us to export everything to China. In 2022 we decided to bring it home! We raised local investment and built a new sneaker factory in Meridian Mississippi called "Shloop" for Made in USA sneakers using innovative technologies and sustainable materials.
As a small manufacturer myself I have discovered that with careful sourcing you can both be made in America and maintain good margins. A major brand offered to rebrand my product and had a small run made at their Chinese factory to test and without a doubt had I gone through with the deal it would have killed my product and my whole business.
You can filter products 50 different ways but not " Made in USA" and that is 100% by design. Its so disappointing, then you get sellers hijack Words like "USA" or "American" in the description but read further its says- Imported.
Even more ironic that Bezos has pledged billions to reduce carbon emissions, but the simplest way he could decrease emissions would be to increase the percentage of domestically produced goods.
Actually it is both a National and Federal Requirement. Telling you this as a CFR certified government contract specialist. It's just every Democrat presidency chooses to ignore enforcement, let alone allow American owned industry to move overseas without penalty!
Thanks. What we buy in our federal programs is a different story, for sure. But for the everyday goods and services we use, "made in America" isn't really that important... except for pride, and GDP might, and economics, and all that... But that really isn't nearly s important as "Not made solely by our enemies" ... Because if the supply line is ever cut off... Bad juju
It is a requirement if you ever expect this country to be self sufficient again and not depend on other countries for everything from food, to gas, to clothing, and everything else! Not having a solid manufacturing base does not support good economic growth. Having nothing but basically a service industry driven economy is a recipe for disaster!
It's hard explain to people who can't understand the importance of flannel shirts,. For people like me we actually can't wait to wear our favorite shirt as the fall leaves signal the coming winter, it's a true comfort.
CHECK THE CONTENT TAG on your garment b4 purchasing to see what the fiber is. If at all possible I try to avoid synthetics as I'm not real keen on wearing 'pop bottles'.
If you are wearing cotton flannel you are doing it wrong. Wool in wintertime. Always. It is good at keeping animals warm. It breathes, it dries quicker than cotton, it keeps you warm when it's wet, it is just as fuzzy, it will stretch and retain it's shape. You can buy good durable active wear in wool. Pick your favorite camping store or catalog and buy wool stuff. You will never go back.
Maybe if they had good-paying american jobs they could afford to buy more expensive american-made items? I am old enough to remember Sam Walton bragging about how everything in Walmart was made in America. Every item in the store had a red white & blue sticker on it that said "Made in USA". Then these companies started wanting more and more profit so they started buying from countries that used child labor. Then they wanted even more profit and started lobbying congress against raising the minimum wage. The common denominator here is corporate profits. Capitalism is not sustainable when these companies require a never-ending increase in profits. There is only so much wealth in the world. For some to have so much, it is necessary for so many others to have very little.
It isn't just corporations wanting higher profits. Government taxes and regulations causes businesses to leave too. Why deal with US regulations when you can go make the product in China which doesn't have regulations.
If the option to buy "made in America" products is available, then I will go that route. But kind of hard to go that route if the option isn't available. But you're not wrong.
Hi Mike. I like flannel shirts. I get them at Duluth trading. Made in Vietnam but cost $50-$70. If they were $120 or more I couldn't do it. It's a conundrum.
Mike you are a National Asset. Been watching you for years. Unfortunately until the existing educational system that exists today is gutted and returned back to the states, our great nation will burn itself to ashes from the inside.
You are a treasure! I would love to chat w you one day. I am a former voc ed teacher turned American manufacturer (33 yrs). It has been a great American story that i have been blessed to live
Mills and clothing manufacturing are returning to the Carolinas. It great to be able to get quality products again. I have a wonderful flannel shirt, I got off a clearance rack - in 1978. Looks brand new . Hasn't even lost a button. Worn and washed a lot. One of my favorites. Well worth the cost. It's going to still exist when I don't. Finding a good shoe repair shop is nearly impossible at the moment. The $80,000 truck is made of mostly plastic and made to break in 5 yrs.
I think the biggest problem is that we're trying to bring back quality in a society that's been trained to desire quantity. They've learned, "That's too expensive - I won't be able to buy this dozen other things I want if I buy that." Chasing microtrends is one example. With the current political climate, things may swing back in our favor out of sheer necessity, since people won't be able to afford much in the first place. I've definitely started reaching for whatever quality I can get my hands on. Would love to see more wool and naturally-tanned leathers available here in the states.
I manufacture truck bodies. You’d be surprised how many customers I get who don’t want junk and don’t care what it costs to have something well made that will last them. It’s certainly satisfying providing something for people that do appreciate it
Yes. But flannel shirts back in their heyday weren’t considered quality. They were for everyday citizens. I wouldn’t want these things to come back as a luxury item. It’s quite predictable that the “natural” market would up-sell a cotton t-shirt for a $100+. It’s poverty chic really…
I worked in a cotton mill for 12 years...Sara Lee was next door with the dye house, knitting machines, and other areas. The mill I worked in was "raw cotton to yarn" that then went next door to Sara Lee. It was long hours and hard work.
@@catatonicbug7522I don't think the Sara Lee mentioned is the baking Sara Lee. Why would cloth yarn go next door door for more processing at a BAKERY?
@@lynnodonnell4764 Did you know that Sara Lee (yes, the "baking" company) owns nearly 60 other brands? At one time, Sara Lee owned Wonderbra, Playtex, Hanes underwear and many other clothing lines. They are a multinational company with their hands in a lot of things we don't expect a "baking" company to be in.
today, in a stroke of luck i haven't had in decades, i found a pair of Wool ww2 surplus pants in a small. for 9 dollars. actual unblended wool. I believe i teleported to the till with them. keep up the good work Mike
Thank you!!! I look at every label and try to support made in America. Shirts to sheets, I am so tired of the garbage available. Please emphasize the longevity. I know I am not alone and I will pay more for quality. Keep up the good work.
My son just started a 2 day a week job with a local heating and cooling company and he is a senior in high school. I am so proud of him. I have 2 bachelors' degrees and a master degree and if I could go back I would do what he is doing!! I hope many Americans start to realize that we need to make things again. A nation of makers is a nation of thinkers!!
Thank you Mike for your videos. This video reminds me that I desire to use what God has given me to have "Made In Texas" mean something. I have so many skills in electrical, manufacturing and others that I need to utilize them. I would hate to be the servant that was given 1 talent and he hid his Master's talent in the sand.... Thank you all for what you do. Keep up the good fight. God bless you and your families.
It was the greatest disaster when the industry went off-shore and took all the textile mills out of this country. The fabric of our country - labor and industry needs to be back in this country! We made the greatest materials and tossed it to global labor.
PEOPLE,IT'S ALL ABOUT $$$$!!! Americans can't, and will not pay for products made in the US!! The AMERICAN WORKERS AND big AND here CORPORATIONS WANT TOO MUCH $$$!! We want inexpensive---we buy & support foreign corporations. Industries left this country, NEVER TO RETURN!! sad to say but we ARE going to LOSE this next war
I was a cabinet maker and made beautiful furniture, in pine, oak, maple, cherry and birch, custom one off furniture. I did this for almost 15 years, but in doing so was not making enough money to buy the wood to make my own furniture for my own home. What I could do is buy solid pine furniture from IKEA and swallow hard in doing so, because my wages didn’t allow me to pay for the wood I was making furniture with, for my own designs. The pieces I have made for myself are my most cherished possessions and I take a great deal of pride in owning them.
Great video as always. People used to make fun of my flannel shirts, but I loved them. Living in S. FL. now, I don't know if I even have one left in my closet, but man, there's nothing like a good flannel shirt!
I work for a company that builds our products in Central Oregon which we source what we can localy but to make it profitable we often have to source certain parts and components from other countries. I do take pride in being a part of something made in USA! Love your content, keep it coming!
I learned to sew years ago. Last year I made all of my clothes for the fall. It has really made me rethink cheap store bought clothing. I would rather make it myself than buy it from China.
I really wish my local college had a community class to teach beginners how to use a sewing machine. I'd take it in a heartbeat. Followed up by a pattern making class. Yes I know there are online courses but some things are better learned face to face. Hands on skills being one of them.
So that includes all of America ? Because America is a Continent. It goes from the Straits of Magellan to the Bering Straits. Made in the USA is maybe a better idea.
Mike, I came out of my four year apprenticeship with a journeyman’s certificate and two years of college. So many “University” types don’t understand the complexity or knowledge required of the crafts. Trade theory, by itself, is worth a four degree.
Fits not that they “don’t understand”, it’s actually 2 things else entirely! 1. They don’t give a shit. 2. They’ll be damned if they do anything that may garner a callus or a bead of sweat.🙄
Making anything in America is incredibly important. I am 53 and have constantly been disappointed by the lack of effort to buy and support things that are made here! Most people I meet just don't care.
When I was working in construction or mechanic I wore one brand and style of work boot on my feet for hours no matter the weather and they would hold up for 3or4 years my wife would say you pay $150 for your shoes and I only pay $10 and get a pair free, when I pulled out about 30 pairs of her shoes that were like new and my shoes that I wore for every reason and never complained about my feet hurting she finally got it in the long run quality is more economical and my boots never clashed with my Levies.
I once worked for a Land Surveyor in Southern Michigan. My go to work boots from early March to late October were genuine, US Army Jungle Boots. They lasted 3 years or more, and better yet, they only cost me $25 at the Main PX at Ft. McCoy, Wisconsin back in the early 90s.
There was a lovely economic dissertation on the high cost of cheap goods. They did the analysis of a high cost high quality pair of boots versus the low cost low value boots. While it hurt more in the short term to buy the quality, the cheaper ones took more money from the person in the long term - by a lot. Made me think very differently about value and cost. I now make that investment, and realize I don’t need 800 shirts.
A couple of years ago i started to realized that nearly everything is made in China. I dont buy as much but i read lables now. My kids and husband bought me a flagpole and USA flag and my only request was that it was made in the USA.
A real truthteller can never be a politician. Nobody wants to hear the honest truth. Nobody. At some point they piss off everyone. Much better to be on the outside shining the light on truth for all to find in good time.
You have to understand. We KNOW the well made more expensive item will last much longer. But we can't put together the cost of the pricier boots at one time. We can only come up with the money for cheaper boots at any given time and if we need the boots now then we'll get the ones we can afford knowing full well we will need to replace them sooner and that it will cost more in the long run but people who live hand to mouth like i do can't afford to think link term when it comes to financial decisions we deal with immediate needs as they come up with whatever resources we have at that time.
I learned to sew my clothes as a teenager. I remember the delicious fabric stores with beautiful fabrics. I remember visiting one of the textile outlet stores and buying beautiful towels and bedding by the pound…..and then, they all disappeared. The American garment union tags were no longer seen in clothing. Just sad. I miss the quality clothing. It was expensive, and the average person did not have a lot but there was likely less pollution for that reason.
As a chronic hobbyist, the quality (lack of) replacement parts for small engines and automotive stuff is atrocious. I'd love to buy american made or factory replacement part, but when there's a $300 price difference, it makes it real difficult...
I really feel this, I am in the textile industry myself and it is not easy. I am actually an American veteran, I went to university in Europe and due to the availability of labor and materials to work with I stayed. I have some friends that are in manufacturing back home and I am trying to support them the best that I can. I think that the learning curve for manufacturing is very high and very technical but it can be done! Investors must support it and people need to get back into it. The same blue collar type of tradesman (like myself) is perfect to become a manufacturing entrepreneur.
It’s simply a humble choice to have less of things but better quality just like food we think about and eat way too much in this country and our waste smh❤✌🏻
Excellent point about the boots. I used to buy $6 umbrellas from the drug store. Within a year or two, they would break or wear out, and I would throw it away and buy another. Eventually, I decided to invest $30 in a quality umbrella. I've had it now for 20 years.
im about there! my parents and my husbands parents really strived to get us into and through college but, only one of mine really went to college, and got a masters. one pushed himself but hasn't finished and really doesn't want to, one said, 'absolutely not' the last two.... im encouraging into a trade.
If you look around RUclips, there are now videos by several teachers discussing the "trades crisis." What's that? They're concerned that many high schoolers are choosing to go into the trades rather than go to college, and are looking for ways to combat that trend.
I'm a 44yr old welder with a 'homeschool' education.I make a close to 6 figure income at my 9-5,I also have a 'side-gig' welding and more work than I can handle-my point is,it doesn't take that much ambition or even skill for that matter to do 'ok' here. Kinda sad! and I really want one of them shirts!
It's getting harder.... and soon with wealth gap and trickle down bs it won't unless it breaks. Also what's the definition of "ok"? Velocity of money is what is important not rich people buying assets and promoting slavery
Becoming a welder is tempting but Do you not worry about your long term health breathing welding fumes? My stepdad was a welder for a long time and talks about himself getting Ill from fumes. I know that some places have vacuums to pull away fumes but every time I have seen a welder in use it didn't have one.
I just came across this Podcast. I worked in manufacturing for years. YES. The US paint applications I made were expensive. But they had a Life Time Guarantee.
I've been buying American since 1988. A kid working at a big box store was flabbergasted why I asked for a Milwaukee battery drill, made in USA. He's no longer there. The store chain was crushed by one that sells made in China crap. And the customers have to buy three in the same period of time as a good old made in USA "anything".
As I have grown older and travel more, I have scaled down my material possessions, greatly. I have finally realized the true, lasting value of buying quality over price!
I own an antique store, and im seeing an uptick in younger people understanding and wanting things made with quality in mind, and buying older items. They are getting away from ikea products.
Watching from Dallas, Texas. 🎉 agreed some people want to go to college other people in winter trade either way there’s not always one path there’s multiple.
And the reason for low quality is not that other countries are incapable of producing higher quality products. It is Americans insatiable appetite for cheap stuff. It's the big companies that set the spec on the product. Because they know Americans will buy them. So there is no incentive for them to change. It's up to us
This is why I only buy fishing rods that are made in the USA. I buy ST Croix Tournament Legend and G-Lommis GCX rods. They are more expensive but I make a good income and can afford them. Both brands are made in Washington state.
I was looking to buy boots made in the USA. So the internet told me Frye boots are made in the USA. I bought some and when they arrived stamped inside on the tag said made in Mexico. So much for that!
Great video and book! Textile and clothing making industries in all the rich countries went to China. EU countries, Japan, South Korea, etc. Major USA brands such as Target, Levi's made big efforts to bring back to USA. I just retired from textiles after 43 years with 25 years abroad. Powerful economic forces have overwhelmed all efforts to reverse. But this book may be a spark to light a fire
When they had Ely Cattleman jeans at the local store , I was ecstatic and bought a few pairs , and that they were less than $30 was awesome. But recently they stopped carrying them , but still have pricier made overseas jeans. What is with people ?
I can honestly say that the brand Wolverines are the best set of boots i ever owned. I wish i had been able to hold on to them but circumstances were not in my favor then. They were with every single penny i paid and then some. Saved my feet on multiple occasions, helped prevent blisters on long hikes, etc. If I'm ever in a place again to buy a pair of Wolverine custom boots you best be assured I'll be jumping on it.
You have to teach everyone Vimes Law where products come in. Manufacturers have to help out, too. It'd be nice to get many of the entry barriers removed...then we could, once again, have real flannels that cost $12.
When each of us buy a product made by one of our neighbors (instead of by someone in a distant country) it enables them to buy a product made by us. And then as that process spreads, it enables all of us to support all of our neighbors as well as ourselves.
This year, I gave my neighbors over 250 lemons. There are probably going to be over 300 next year (sprinkling used coffee grounds under the tree helps a lot. The mulberry tree is loaded! The plum and peach trees are going to need some branches supported.
we manufacture these high tech waste water equipment that are very durable. and is higher quality and super efficient. few US cities want our stuff. most of our customers are overseas. just too much of an old boy’s network. thank God for Pepsi
As someone who weaves fabric in my home it takes a lot of work but the quality is so much higher than anything you can get in a store. Quality like that can be addictive.
Enforce Term Limits on Congress ; Raise Imports Tariffs on Chinese Manufacturing by American Companies by 40% if there company doesn't do 70% of its assembly here in the U.S.
@@daniels.2720 Term limits already exist - they are called elections. Politicians can be removed at every election. They aren't because people choose to keep them. If you believe in term limits, then NEVER vote for the incumbent regardless of party. If you vote because of party, you are literally supporting the problem.
"WE"???? Who is this we. I'm not making sacrifices just because WE the workers have been sold out for years, for larger incomes to CEO's of big corps, and money to help them lobby. Trade agreements. This has been happening for a long time. Mike is lost on this one. WE didn't start importing goods, we just started buying what was available. First it was made in Japan, then it was made in China, when Japan started advancing themselves, and the cost went up, which meant less to those CEO's. Add ontop of that all the smaller US companies think everything they make is gold. No....I'm not paying $100 for a shirt. Dont worry though. China isn't going to be making our our junk for much longer. You will forced to buy mostly US overpriced products in the guise of "Freedom" after everyone starts fighting.
@@BenSmith-cm8oc You don't make society better by seizing from those who earned it to give to those who didn't. Wealth does not increase through redistribution. It increases through creation. Pulling other people down doesn't pull you up.
The discussion of knapping brought back memories for me. I worked in textiles for 10 years in the 90s. We should have listened to Ross Perot. NAFTA killed our textile industry
Yep. I worked at a textile place, and myself and a friend left work one day, stopped at a convenience store and just happened to look down at the paper. Front page was that the place we worked at, and had just left, was closing. Next day they held a big meeting explaining that, yes, we were closing, and yes, the jobs were going overseas, and yes, it was because of NAFTA. It was awful.
I bought the Thorogood boots awesome product, made in the USA, Union made! Never had a break in period, instantly comfortable!! Midwest boots is the vendor
It isn't just economy of scale its the velocity of dollar, the dollar that is spent on quality local production has a higher velocity and more local staying power than the cheap alternative.
What is driving companies out of the US is American wages, a cheap throw away mind set, and other production costs. Paying American wages to workers drives product costs up 10x. People don’t want to pay more for quality. Then you have out side costs like taxes, insurance, and energy. These costs are getting out of hand for any business. Don’t forget what most people don’t think about too with manufacturing, EPA and OSHA requirements.
As a small manufacturing company we are feeling the pressures. We often lose to the lower cost import products. You guys are also exactly right that American industry has had to not only compete with imports but with each other to the point that there is little to no profit left. The average profit margin for a machine shop manufacturing company in America is 5-8 percent. It honestly has to be a labor of love for an owner because you cannot make money or even have profit to grow off of that margin. In our shop things are cooling off which means we have to sell equipment to weather the economic storm then go buy it again when things are better. It is an insane cycle. On top of that we would love to pay our staff more but we just do not have it to offer. I am not sure where this spiral will end but I fear our country has not seen the worst of it yet.
Howcome you didn't put links to buy all that merch in in the video description? Seriously, Mike, I'm am horrible shopper. I WANT to be advertised to. And yet I run an adblocker because, turns out, I don't feel a need to meet hot singles in my area near so much as the Google skynet seems to think. I could really use a comfortable flannel and, since I don't plan on changing shirts for two weeks either, I don't mind spending on it. Mike, help us out here, leave links to worthwhile products. Just leave the hot singles out of it.
There was a documentary a few years ago by a guy that resolved to use only made in USA products for a year. It was eye opening to see that many everyday things we use are hard if not impossible to find made in USA. Soap, detergent, hoses, shower heads,etc.
I have a dream, where the American people refuse to buy except from someone they've shaken hands with, where every govt action is taken out of fear that the people may revolt over it, that people use physical hard currency exclusively, and there is no property or inheritance taxes anywhere.
Excellent video. I agree bring business back home. I like to quilt. Very little fabric is manufactured in America. We have great artisans/designers and wholesale suppliers. There are several large online businesses to purchase order from. By the time fabric hits the home town shops, the cost can range from $12.00 per yard up to $20.00.😮 How can they stay in business. Support Americans by choosing to keep our business enterprises home your dollar will count. 🎶💐💖
My father always told me, "You get what you pay for." But unfortunately, I think we have become a throw away world. Buy cheap, throw away, buy cheap again. Another thing I've noticed is the greed of these companies. They have to make billions so they can pay their CEO unprecedented bonuses. It's very sad. I pray we can fix this.
I grew up in the 70's & learned from watching my parents shop, to buy American. I remember going to Sears w\Mom & she was always looking at the tags on clothing. When I questioned why she did that (because clothes was already divided by size), she explained to me how important it was to buy American. Both her & my Dad always preached to me that philosophy & I've watched the decline of American made products dwindle over the years & am saddened. Glad some stuck it out & others are coming back!
I downloaded Steven's book and in the first 2 minutes of listening there were at least 2 F bombs dropped. Before everyone goes nuts and starts criticizing my sensitivity. I just want to say that a little warning should have been given in case someone would prefer not listening/reading such. Just saying. PS: Mike I do appreciate your content.
It is so easy to blame others for our poor decisions. Greedy businesses, incompetent govt, lazy youth... Be the change you wish to see in this world. You deserve what you accept.
So, you walked around shareholder and consumer choices. Most shareholders want greater returns on their capital, and consumers are always looking for a bargain. Most don't want to reward labor with better wages if they don't have to.
I think Terry Pratchett described it best with his Sam Vimes boots theory of economics. People know the Red Wings are far superior to the Wal-Mart boots. But, if they have to choose between buying the Red Wings and feeding their family...do they even really have a choice? Knowing that the $350 boots are better and will last you longer doesn't matter when you only have $50.
This is so true. Most people would much prefer to buy quality, made in USA items, but especially in the current economy, it's been made impossible to do. Maybe this is on purpose?
Over regulation is a major problem. I live in So Cal. A furniture factory recently shut down because the South Coast Air quality increase regulations. I grew up during the sixties, then the air was alway brown. The air is so clean today in comparison. They put 900 workers out of work for no reason.
One issue with clothing is in a lot of Europe, people tend to buy mainly classic traditional style clothes that will last a long time and don't mind paying for it. In the US, we are pushed to change our wardrobe with every new season.
Have never heard of the Red Wing refurbishment program. How do you get this information disseminated so the consumer has an option rather than just going to the local department store?
This started at lest by 1973,Philly had a big textile industry. The company I worked for leased a knitting mill as a warehouse the machines were still there. Ran by punch cards, sold as scrap.
Mike Rowe is highly educated and I’d bet money no one in his family has gone to or is going to a trade school . He’s found a niche and he’s very good at it .
I went to school and achieved the skills of a journeyman commercial electrician in California back in 2015 I topped out at 80k a year working for a non union small contractor. In 2020 I moved to south Carolina and the best pay I could find in one of the fastest growing community's was $20/hr with no benefits or even overtime. Because of the ( the cost of living is cheaper here ) mindset of the south, I left that field of work and have sence been working as a contractor for a mobile RV roofing company. I have large expenses, but my labor is compensated at a rate I am comfortable with. I won't be able to buy a home or a fancy new truck, or even a vacation once a year. But I am able to enjoy myself and buy the quality items from professional craftsman. I guess it all boils down to priorities
I still remember being in southern Alabama and, in the small town, that there was fabric and clothing being made and was a job producing industry. Now it’s no longer there and the town and America has suffered.
Ah, you guys really want to get me started on this topic? Listen, all the talk about bringing manufacturing back is nice, but it's never going to happen. Why? Because for all that people say they want it.... they really don't. Lots of talk, sure, but when given the choice, they will always opt for the cheaper mass-produced chicom merchandise. Always. And while that might seem a little mean to say, we have to look at what's changed over the years. As something of an amateur historian of the traditional trades, and a blacksmith, I love going back through the old books to see how things were done in days past. Once you do that long enough, though, you start seeing patterns emerge. There are two vectors attacking the working folks - their own myopia and greed. Every notice how everyone loves to talk about the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back, but never the million straws that came before it and how all those straws made it impossible for the camel to be healthy and productive? The average American is terribly myopic and greedy, and thus easily talked into shooting themselves in the foot. We want the cheapest goods possible, but also always demand the highest wages we can get. We claim we want manufacturing at home, but then we support things that make it almost impossible for there to be manufacturing here in the States - and Western Nations, in general. And when you bring up these issues, the people will fight you tooth and nail, call you all sorts of names, and deny the facts that are plainly evident if you read up on the history of things. I tell folks that everything that was once produced in The Rust Belt is still produced, just not here. The trick is looking at what changed, what happened to make a thriving center of manufacturing that raised up the entire world.... into a hellscape of poverty, drugs, crime, and sorrow. What happened? When you look at it honestly, you see that it was a combination of things, all targeted at actually destroying manufacturing, and sold to the uninformed citizenry as somehow to their benefit. Every day, new taxes, regulations, policies and laws were enacted at the local, state, and federal levels. No single one of those things was horrible, but when you pile thousands of straws on the camel's back, it's only a matter of time before the camel collapses. Today, everything that used to be made in the Rust Belt is still being made, but we managed to somehow make it more economical to have the stuff made on the other side of the earth and shipped halfway around the world to a store near us.... rather than right down the road. Think about that for a minute. It's cheaper to make something thousands of miles away instead of a dozen miles away. Once you realize that, you can start looking at what makes it so expensive to operate CONUS. And once you look into it, and see how heavy the tax and regulation burden is, it's no wonder that people are shutting down their businesses, or refusing to start up new enterprises. As a blacksmith, I deal with this regularly and hear it from hundreds of other craftsmen. It'd be nice to hire in some help, but what a nightmare that presents when you get into the details of what it means to have an employee. Think about it for a minute. If I hire someone at $30,000/yr, that sounds nice, but that means I have to have a minimum of $30,000 in sales every single year just to cover that employee's wages. Where are those sales coming from? Where are the customers? If you talk to craftsmen who will be honest with you, they'll tell you that customers are very hard to come by even though people say they want quality craftsmanship and fine work, jobs at home, etc. The difference is that they want it, but want it at cheap third-world prices. Why is it so expensive? Taxes, regulations, policies, laws, all the things that people support at the local level adds up, and nobody wants to admit that they were wrong. You want a minimum wage? Great, but it's going to cost you because it drives up the prices on all the goods and services you buy since ALL employees everywhere get that same pay raise. You want to open your doors to millions of immigrants every year, fine, but it's going to cost you. They need jobs, too, and that competition for work will drive the wages down since there's always someone willing to work for a dollar less. On and on it goes. There's no stopping it because nobody is willing to give up their own pet project, the thing they want most of all. Promise them something from the public coffers and they'll be on your leash forever.
For 25 years I have purchased from and worked with a manufacturing company who makes over 400 home consumable products. Made in the USA the same or less than the products people buy in the store or online comes down to a very smart businessman who’s also not greedy to make this happen.
Mike Rowe made more per episode than most of his subjects on dirty jobs will make their entire lives. His opinions are not worth much, just has a great voice. We can can thank the Walton's and short term profit minded corporations for our current predicament, once Walmart pushed everybody to produce in china everybody else had to follow in oder to compete... it was a boon for the rich and a disaster for our country. Yea team billionaire !
All good points. The path to raising prosperity for working class America is through the trades, not clothing manufacturer. We most certainly should bring manufacturing back to America, but the good paying jobs will be restricted to the clothing/pattern designers and the technicians keeping all the high-end automation running.
I've operated my one-guy wood shop for 15 years. Folks sometimes ask why it costs "so much" for me to make them a table. I tell them that if they just need a table to play cards and eat breakfast at, go get one from your store of choice for $100. But if you want one a custom size, with a distinct look, something your children can argue over when you die, where maybe you can even come by and help with the finishing, come on over and we will get it done. Most of my work is not fancy but people remain amazed that someone still does this kind of thing in Los Angeles.
In the past three years, I am surprised there are any businesses left in Los Angeles. Must be an indistinct unmarked shop with security akin to Ft. Knox.
I grew up on and inherited handmade furniture from my family. Practically no one recognizes it...let alone appreciates it, or the intellect and dexterity required to craft a chest of drawers. I sit every visiting child on a 200 year old Windsor and tell them the are seated on a work of art.
But, but NPR and CNN claimed California had eradicated all Americans in that state .... LoL
A lot of people just dont understand the value of artisan goods. The search for a pair of scissors consists of opening their amazon app and buying the cheapest one they see for $3. They use it twice, it breaks, they buy another. My family thinks I'm crazy for buying a $300 pair of handcrafted industrial tailor shears. It will last so long my ghost will be using them and I find great comfort knowing that my great grandchildren will be terrified to go near them.
Good quality is hard to come by these days. If you want it to last you buy quality, trash is trash.
As I was growing up, my dad taught me to pay attention to quality for 2 major reasons.
First, he said, if you can spend $10 on a pan that lasts you a year or $20 on a pan that lasts you 5 years it should be obvious what's the better choice.
But more than that, and the piece of advice that's helped me the most, is that EVERY time you use that whatever-it-is you bought, you'll experience the extra quality and be happier, instead of getting frustrated by subpar equipment/tools but you saved a few bucks.
I was lucky enough to be able to thank him for that advice before he passed.
So right, I buy Al-Clad cookware, cause it's made here in USA of high quality materials. I see people buying cheap clothes that barely last of Stand up to washing. I'd rather spend $20 for a t-shirt that I know is going to last.
you are so on point for tools. For years I got cheap tools but a few years ago I sprung for a good set from Milwaukie (drill, driver, multi tool) and I will never buy a cheap tool again.
He was a wise man. I never buy the most expensive tool but I also don't buy the cheapest. Like you stated, a cheap tool will continue to fail and interrupt your workday which is lost revenue that you cannot pass on to the Consumer.
Cheap tools are great, if it’s a tool you’re only going to need a few times. Tools you rely on need to be good quality. The rj11 crimp tool I’ve used twice at work in the last 4 1/2 years? The $5 version works fine. The wire strippers, multimeter, and impact driver I use all day every day? You’d better believe I bought the highest quality I could find.
See, my dad told me to live each day like it’s my last. So no reason to pay extra money for something that will last more than a day.
My 14 yr old daughter is going into high-school soon. Shes going to be taking welding. Im so proud of her.
I’ve been a pipeline welder for 25 years. I make a little over 200 K a year. Tell her to stick with it you can make a very nice life with welding.
My 24 year old granddaughter is enrolled in welding school!
My soon to be 16yo daughter will be starting welding classes in the fall.
On the other side of the row my 18yo son is honors focused on economics as a freshman at Ohio State.
I'm excited for both if them and their respective journeys.
BEST THING YOU COULD EVER LEARN... Its a tool that can make/fix any other tool.... its like a 3D printer but metal.
Try machining too!
14 years ago I started down this path of entrepreneurship for building sustainable factories in Mississippi using algae as a renewable material. After 12 years we found that all of our BLOOM algae resins were being purchased for footwear brands which required us to export everything to China. In 2022 we decided to bring it home! We raised local investment and built a new sneaker factory in Meridian Mississippi called "Shloop" for Made in USA sneakers using innovative technologies and sustainable materials.
Hot a website to buy your sneakers direct?
Pretty expensive
@@MindBodySoulOk you're a fool
@@MindBodySoulOk thats the economic loop we are in. We are paid so little that a $235 sneaker seems expensive.
You still in business?
As a small manufacturer myself I have discovered that with careful sourcing you can both be made in America and maintain good margins. A major brand offered to rebrand my product and had a small run made at their Chinese factory to test and without a doubt had I gone through with the deal it would have killed my product and my whole business.
I would love to see a true “Made in USA” label/category/ in stores and specifically online. Imagine Amazon having a “Made in USA” drop down selection!
That was Wal-Mart once upon a time. They sold out. Won’t shop there.
You can filter products 50 different ways but not " Made in USA" and that is 100% by design. Its so disappointing, then you get sellers hijack Words like "USA" or "American" in the description but read further its says- Imported.
@@joewiltjer5201my favorite trick in marketing is the companies who use the phrase designed in the USA. As if that means anything valuable
@@Msspinnerb8they’re based in Arkansas. Can you think of any prominent figures that have come out of Arkansas and pushed free trade?
Even more ironic that Bezos has pledged billions to reduce carbon emissions, but the simplest way he could decrease emissions would be to increase the percentage of domestically produced goods.
"Made in America" isnt honestly a requirement.... "Not made by our enemies" IS a requirement...
Actually it is both a National and Federal Requirement. Telling you this as a CFR certified government contract specialist. It's just every Democrat presidency chooses to ignore enforcement, let alone allow American owned industry to move overseas without penalty!
Thanks. What we buy in our federal programs is a different story, for sure. But for the everyday goods and services we use, "made in America" isn't really that important... except for pride, and GDP might, and economics, and all that... But that really isn't nearly s important as "Not made solely by our enemies" ... Because if the supply line is ever cut off... Bad juju
Your enemy? It seems to me that you are actually the enemy... or did they do something to you?
It is a requirement if you ever expect this country to be self sufficient again and not depend on other countries for everything from food, to gas, to clothing, and everything else! Not having a solid manufacturing base does not support good economic growth. Having nothing but basically a service industry driven economy is a recipe for disaster!
@@Zach-ku6eu - Dems seem to actively force industry offshore. lol..
It's hard explain to people who can't understand the importance of flannel shirts,. For people like me we actually can't wait to wear our favorite shirt as the fall leaves signal the coming winter, it's a true comfort.
I love flannel shirts...trying to hit the family up for a flannel robe for my birthday.
I have never found flannel to be comfortable or particularly attractive on my body, but some people live for it and I support that.
@@aygwm that's what they're talking about, properly manufactured flannel and the cheap coarse type
CHECK THE CONTENT TAG on your garment b4 purchasing to see what the fiber is. If at all possible I try to avoid synthetics as I'm not real keen on wearing 'pop bottles'.
If you are wearing cotton flannel you are doing it wrong. Wool in wintertime. Always. It is good at keeping animals warm. It breathes, it dries quicker than cotton, it keeps you warm when it's wet, it is just as fuzzy, it will stretch and retain it's shape. You can buy good durable active wear in wool. Pick your favorite camping store or catalog and buy wool stuff. You will never go back.
Excellent video! Too many scream “bring back American jobs” while they shop at Walmart- the hypocrisy is staggering
Maybe if they had good-paying american jobs they could afford to buy more expensive american-made items? I am old enough to remember Sam Walton bragging about how everything in Walmart was made in America. Every item in the store had a red white & blue sticker on it that said "Made in USA". Then these companies started wanting more and more profit so they started buying from countries that used child labor. Then they wanted even more profit and started lobbying congress against raising the minimum wage. The common denominator here is corporate profits. Capitalism is not sustainable when these companies require a never-ending increase in profits. There is only so much wealth in the world. For some to have so much, it is necessary for so many others to have very little.
It isn't just corporations wanting higher profits. Government taxes and regulations causes businesses to leave too. Why deal with US regulations when you can go make the product in China which doesn't have regulations.
If the option to buy "made in America" products is available, then I will go that route. But kind of hard to go that route if the option isn't available. But you're not wrong.
Hi Mike. I like flannel shirts. I get them at Duluth trading. Made in Vietnam but cost $50-$70. If they were $120 or more I couldn't do it. It's a conundrum.
Ironically, Walmart used to prioritize made in USA products…
Steven did a fine job. There is nothing like a well-worn flannel shirt on a cold winter morning. Mike is great.
Mike you are a National Asset. Been watching you for years. Unfortunately until the existing educational system that exists today is gutted and returned back to the states, our great nation will burn itself to ashes from the inside.
Hey bubblehead, what boat(s)?
I was on SSN's out of Pearl Harbor '83-'96
You are a treasure! I would love to chat w you one day. I am a former voc ed teacher turned American manufacturer (33 yrs). It has been a great American story that i have been blessed to live
@@michaelmeehan9083 James Monroe SSBN 622 G, Permit SSN 594, Georgia SSBN 729 G, Charlotte SSN 766, Maryland SSBN 738 B
People need to volunteer to teach our kids to read!
Mills and clothing manufacturing are returning to the Carolinas. It great to be able to get quality products again.
I have a wonderful flannel shirt, I got off a clearance rack - in 1978. Looks brand new . Hasn't even lost a button. Worn and washed a lot. One of my favorites. Well worth the cost. It's going to still exist when I don't.
Finding a good shoe repair shop is nearly impossible at the moment.
The $80,000 truck is made of mostly plastic and made to break in 5 yrs.
I think the biggest problem is that we're trying to bring back quality in a society that's been trained to desire quantity. They've learned, "That's too expensive - I won't be able to buy this dozen other things I want if I buy that." Chasing microtrends is one example. With the current political climate, things may swing back in our favor out of sheer necessity, since people won't be able to afford much in the first place. I've definitely started reaching for whatever quality I can get my hands on. Would love to see more wool and naturally-tanned leathers available here in the states.
I manufacture truck bodies. You’d be surprised how many customers I get who don’t want junk and don’t care what it costs to have something well made that will last them. It’s certainly satisfying providing something for people that do appreciate it
nail on head...dollar store culture
Some better American women would be nice, too.
@@akraix182Yup. The “seconds” market is phenomenal…that’s the consumer economy right now.
Yes. But flannel shirts back in their heyday weren’t considered quality. They were for everyday citizens. I wouldn’t want these things to come back as a luxury item. It’s quite predictable that the “natural” market would up-sell a cotton t-shirt for a $100+. It’s poverty chic really…
I worked in a cotton mill for 12 years...Sara Lee was next door with the dye house, knitting machines, and other areas. The mill I worked in was "raw cotton to yarn" that then went next door to Sara Lee. It was long hours and hard work.
Nobody doesn't like Sara Lee!
@@catatonicbug7522
Exactly 😂
@@catatonicbug7522I don't think the Sara Lee mentioned is the baking Sara Lee.
Why would cloth yarn go next door door for more processing at a BAKERY?
I only wear cotton. I can’t stand synthetic blends
@@lynnodonnell4764 Did you know that Sara Lee (yes, the "baking" company) owns nearly 60 other brands? At one time, Sara Lee owned Wonderbra, Playtex, Hanes underwear and many other clothing lines. They are a multinational company with their hands in a lot of things we don't expect a "baking" company to be in.
today, in a stroke of luck i haven't had in decades, i found a pair of Wool ww2 surplus pants in a small. for 9 dollars. actual unblended wool. I believe i teleported to the till with them. keep up the good work Mike
I have almost cycled out all of my foreign made jeans and khakis for All American clothing. Very pleased. They have good T-Shirts as well.
Thank you!!! I look at every label and try to support made in America. Shirts to sheets, I am so tired of the garbage available. Please emphasize the longevity. I know I am not alone and I will pay more for quality. Keep up the good work.
Red Land cotton sheets. Amazing.
Why would I buy American? Vote for healthcare and higher wages and I’ll buy your overpriced garbage not one second before 😂
My son just started a 2 day a week job with a local heating and cooling company and he is a senior in high school. I am so proud of him. I have 2 bachelors' degrees and a master degree and if I could go back I would do what he is doing!! I hope many Americans start to realize that we need to make things again. A nation of makers is a nation of thinkers!!
Thank you Mike for your videos. This video reminds me that I desire to use what God has given me to have "Made In Texas" mean something. I have so many skills in electrical, manufacturing and others that I need to utilize them. I would hate to be the servant that was given 1 talent and he hid his Master's talent in the sand.... Thank you all for what you do. Keep up the good fight. God bless you and your families.
Make it mean something.
Toyota has really damaged the meaning of "Made in Texas" by putting that sticker on all the trucks they assemble here.
It was the greatest disaster when the industry went off-shore and took all the textile mills out of this country. The fabric of our country - labor and industry needs to be back in this country! We made the greatest materials and tossed it to global labor.
PEOPLE,IT'S ALL ABOUT $$$$!!! Americans can't, and will not pay for products made in the US!! The AMERICAN WORKERS AND big AND here CORPORATIONS WANT TOO MUCH $$$!! We want inexpensive---we buy & support foreign corporations. Industries left this country, NEVER TO RETURN!! sad to say but we ARE going to LOSE this next war
People need skills, what happens when we stop getting goods from overseas!
The business of business is to make money for its investors for as much and long as possible. Plus our fellow citizens went to Walmart!
@@michaelwallace7587you let Walmart run everything out of business
Unions ran the textile industry out of the US.
I was a cabinet maker and made beautiful furniture, in pine, oak, maple, cherry and birch, custom one off furniture. I did this for almost 15 years, but in doing so was not making enough money to buy the wood to make my own furniture for my own home. What I could do is buy solid pine furniture from IKEA and swallow hard in doing so, because my wages didn’t allow me to pay for the wood I was making furniture with, for my own designs. The pieces I have made for myself are my most cherished possessions and I take a great deal of pride in owning them.
Great video as always. People used to make fun of my flannel shirts, but I loved them. Living in S. FL. now, I don't know if I even have one left in my closet, but man, there's nothing like a good flannel shirt!
Support the small brands that are doing it!!!! Thank you for this♥
I work for a company that builds our products in Central Oregon which we source what we can localy but to make it profitable we often have to source certain parts and components from other countries. I do take pride in being a part of something made in USA! Love your content, keep it coming!
I learned to sew years ago. Last year I made all of my clothes for the fall. It has really made me rethink cheap store bought clothing. I would rather make it myself than buy it from China.
yet it's almost impossible to find fabric made in the USA
@@drdoan993that is true!! But we can work towards that goal now.
That’s incredible!! I’m learning to make Tshirts now. I’ve made dresses and skirts and pjs and cotton pants. Jeans are on my list to try.
I really wish my local college had a community class to teach beginners how to use a sewing machine. I'd take it in a heartbeat. Followed up by a pattern making class. Yes I know there are online courses but some things are better learned face to face. Hands on skills being one of them.
@@angelwendy84 I’ve learned a lot watching RUclips videos and looking for tutorials on blogs.
I'm in! I am all about American made flannel! Yes to that!
Loved it!
Make America Great Again!
So that includes all of America ? Because America is a Continent. It goes from the Straits of Magellan to the Bering Straits. Made in the USA is maybe a better idea.
Poopy Pants and Putin in 2024
Mike, I came out of my four year apprenticeship with a journeyman’s certificate and two years of college. So many “University” types don’t understand the complexity or knowledge required of the crafts. Trade theory, by itself, is worth a four degree.
Fits not that they “don’t understand”, it’s actually 2 things else entirely!
1. They don’t give a shit.
2. They’ll be damned if they do anything that may garner a callus or a bead of sweat.🙄
Thanks Mike. I hope the country listens before it’s too late.
Thankya Mike! As a tradesman, I appreciate you shining a light on the many hard working lads n lasses out there❤
Making anything in America is incredibly important. I am 53 and have constantly been disappointed by the lack of effort to buy and support things that are made here! Most people I meet just don't care.
Correct. Consumers like bargains, and shareholders like higher corporate profits.
can you name product that is 100% made in Amaerica today?
@@TimHall-y8sguitar made in China $100
Guitar made in Mexico $400
Guitar made in the US $2000
Your country is built on slavery
@@HiDefHDMusic what country hasn't been "built" on s;avery?
@@TimHall-y8s Does that make it right?
When I was working in construction or mechanic I wore one brand and style of work boot on my feet for hours no matter the weather and they would hold up for 3or4 years my wife would say you pay $150 for your shoes and I only pay $10 and get a pair free, when I pulled out about 30 pairs of her shoes that were like new and my shoes that I wore for every reason and never complained about my feet hurting she finally got it in the long run quality is more economical and my boots never clashed with my Levies.
I once worked for a Land Surveyor in Southern Michigan. My go to work boots from early March to late October were genuine, US Army Jungle Boots. They lasted 3 years or more, and better yet, they only cost me $25 at the Main PX at Ft. McCoy, Wisconsin back in the early 90s.
There was a lovely economic dissertation on the high cost of cheap goods. They did the analysis of a high cost high quality pair of boots versus the low cost low value boots. While it hurt more in the short term to buy the quality, the cheaper ones took more money from the person in the long term - by a lot. Made me think very differently about value and cost. I now make that investment, and realize I don’t need 800 shirts.
Buy once, cry once.
A couple of years ago i started to realized that nearly everything is made in China. I dont buy as much but i read lables now. My kids and husband bought me a flagpole and USA flag and my only request was that it was made in the USA.
Trump even wears products made in China. That is how he is going to make America great again ?
I never buy anything made in China.
It’s surprising hard to find US flags made in the US
Assembled in America and Made in America are 2 different things
Most "china" stuff is cheap made garbage buying that cheap crap makes most people more poor
Mike needs to run for president of the United States!
Why ? Most of the embedded politicians won't capitulate anything to making this a better Country ...ever...
President is just the spokesperson.
Mike is too smart for that 😂
A real truthteller can never be a politician. Nobody wants to hear the honest truth. Nobody. At some point they piss off everyone. Much better to be on the outside shining the light on truth for all to find in good time.
I'd actually like him in the Sec. of Labor or Interior post....just imagine what could change.
You have to understand. We KNOW the well made more expensive item will last much longer. But we can't put together the cost of the pricier boots at one time. We can only come up with the money for cheaper boots at any given time and if we need the boots now then we'll get the ones we can afford knowing full well we will need to replace them sooner and that it will cost more in the long run but people who live hand to mouth like i do can't afford to think link term when it comes to financial decisions we deal with immediate needs as they come up with whatever resources we have at that time.
The most expensive thing a person can be...is Poor !
@@camwinston5248 AMEN!!
@@camwinston5248 - poor and "needy".
@@kadmow yes this "needy" kicks it too another level.
Yet how many people still find money for pot, meth, heroin, fent as well as loads of alcohol.😮
I learned to sew my clothes as a teenager. I remember the delicious fabric stores with beautiful fabrics. I remember visiting one of the textile outlet stores and buying beautiful towels and bedding by the pound…..and then, they all disappeared. The American garment union tags were no longer seen in clothing. Just sad. I miss the quality clothing. It was expensive, and the average person did not have a lot but there was likely less pollution for that reason.
My very first business class instructor told us that every time you spend a dollar, you're casting a vote! I never forgot it.
As a chronic hobbyist, the quality (lack of) replacement parts for small engines and automotive stuff is atrocious. I'd love to buy american made or factory replacement part, but when there's a $300 price difference, it makes it real difficult...
Yeah, good parts cost money and LAST, cheap parts are junk!
@@freetimeoffshore3157 no shit... 🤦♂️
We all have different definitions of the same word.
I really feel this, I am in the textile industry myself and it is not easy. I am actually an American veteran, I went to university in Europe and due to the availability of labor and materials to work with I stayed. I have some friends that are in manufacturing back home and I am trying to support them the best that I can. I think that the learning curve for manufacturing is very high and very technical but it can be done! Investors must support it and people need to get back into it. The same blue collar type of tradesman (like myself) is perfect to become a manufacturing entrepreneur.
It’s simply a humble choice to have less of things but better quality just like food we think about and eat way too much in this country and our waste smh❤✌🏻
Excellent point about the boots. I used to buy $6 umbrellas from the drug store. Within a year or two, they would break or wear out, and I would throw it away and buy another. Eventually, I decided to invest $30 in a quality umbrella. I've had it now for 20 years.
Just wait until, "My kid is the first in the family to not get a college degree." becomes the ultimate parental flex.
im about there! my parents and my husbands parents really strived to get us into and through college but, only one of mine really went to college, and got a masters. one pushed himself but hasn't finished and really doesn't want to, one said, 'absolutely not' the last two.... im encouraging into a trade.
If you look around RUclips, there are now videos by several teachers discussing the "trades crisis."
What's that? They're concerned that many high schoolers are choosing to go into the trades rather than go to college, and are looking for ways to combat that trend.
Working in textile mills for over 45 years...weaving, seeing warps made etc you said everything right.
I'm a 44yr old welder with a 'homeschool' education.I make a close to 6 figure income at my 9-5,I also have a 'side-gig' welding and more work than I can handle-my point is,it doesn't take that much ambition or even skill for that matter to do 'ok' here. Kinda sad! and I really want one of them shirts!
It's getting harder.... and soon with wealth gap and trickle down bs it won't unless it breaks. Also what's the definition of "ok"? Velocity of money is what is important not rich people buying assets and promoting slavery
Becoming a welder is tempting but Do you not worry about your long term health breathing welding fumes? My stepdad was a welder for a long time and talks about himself getting Ill from fumes. I know that some places have vacuums to pull away fumes but every time I have seen a welder in use it didn't have one.
You definitely sound homeschooled 😂
I just came across this Podcast. I worked in manufacturing for years. YES. The US paint applications I made were expensive. But they had a Life Time Guarantee.
I've been buying American since 1988. A kid working at a big box store was flabbergasted why I asked for a Milwaukee battery drill, made in USA. He's no longer there. The store chain was crushed by one that sells made in China crap. And the customers have to buy three in the same period of time as a good old made in USA "anything".
As I have grown older and travel more, I have scaled down my material possessions, greatly. I have finally realized the true, lasting value of buying quality over price!
I own an antique store, and im seeing an uptick in younger people understanding and wanting things made with quality in mind, and buying older items. They are getting away from ikea products.
Watching from Dallas, Texas. 🎉 agreed some people want to go to college other people in winter trade either way there’s not always one path there’s multiple.
Quality over quantity.
And the reason for low quality is not that other countries are incapable of producing higher quality products. It is Americans insatiable appetite for cheap stuff. It's the big companies that set the spec on the product. Because they know Americans will buy them. So there is no incentive for them to change. It's up to us
Mike Rowe should be President. Mike is a level headed Mainer as I am , he makes more sense than any lawmaker ever has.
This is why I only buy fishing rods that are made in the USA. I buy ST Croix Tournament Legend and G-Lommis GCX rods. They are more expensive but I make a good income and can afford them. Both brands are made in Washington state.
Gonna get one of those shirts and the book… like my Origin boots great story made in “Merica” ! We need more stories of featured companies !
I was looking to buy boots made in the USA. So the internet told me Frye boots are made in the USA. I bought some and when they arrived stamped inside on the tag said made in Mexico. So much for that!
Look to Origin USA. They are phenominal had made in Maine.
Made in America!
Great video and book! Textile and clothing making industries in all the rich countries went to China. EU countries, Japan, South Korea, etc. Major USA brands such as Target, Levi's made big efforts to bring back to USA. I just retired from textiles after 43 years with 25 years abroad. Powerful economic forces have overwhelmed all efforts to reverse. But this book may be a spark to light a fire
When they had Ely Cattleman jeans at the local store , I was ecstatic and bought a few pairs , and that they were less than $30 was awesome.
But recently they stopped carrying them , but still have pricier made overseas jeans. What is with people ?
Brainwashed by the TeeVee...
That’s capitalism
That’s why it’s bad
I can honestly say that the brand Wolverines are the best set of boots i ever owned. I wish i had been able to hold on to them but circumstances were not in my favor then. They were with every single penny i paid and then some. Saved my feet on multiple occasions, helped prevent blisters on long hikes, etc. If I'm ever in a place again to buy a pair of Wolverine custom boots you best be assured I'll be jumping on it.
You have to teach everyone Vimes Law where products come in. Manufacturers have to help out, too. It'd be nice to get many of the entry barriers removed...then we could, once again, have real flannels that cost $12.
When each of us buy a product made by one of our neighbors (instead of by someone in a distant country) it enables them to buy a product made by us. And then as that process spreads, it enables all of us to support all of our neighbors as well as ourselves.
I absolutely miss made in America. 😢😢😢😢😢And the beautiful healthy home grown food 😢😢😢😢
This year, I gave my neighbors over 250 lemons. There are probably going to be over 300 next year (sprinkling used coffee grounds under the tree helps a lot. The mulberry tree is loaded! The plum and peach trees are going to need some branches supported.
we manufacture these high tech waste water equipment that are very durable. and is higher quality and super efficient. few US cities want our stuff. most of our customers are overseas. just too much of an old boy’s network. thank God for Pepsi
As someone who weaves fabric in my home it takes a lot of work but the quality is so much higher than anything you can get in a store. Quality like that can be addictive.
We have to sacrifice to bring manufacturing back to this country.
Enforce Term Limits on Congress ;
Raise Imports Tariffs on Chinese Manufacturing by American Companies by 40% if there company doesn't do 70% of its assembly here in the U.S.
@@daniels.2720 Term limits already exist - they are called elections. Politicians can be removed at every election. They aren't because people choose to keep them. If you believe in term limits, then NEVER vote for the incumbent regardless of party. If you vote because of party, you are literally supporting the problem.
"WE"???? Who is this we. I'm not making sacrifices just because WE the workers have been sold out for years, for larger incomes to CEO's of big corps, and money to help them lobby. Trade agreements. This has been happening for a long time.
Mike is lost on this one. WE didn't start importing goods, we just started buying what was available. First it was made in Japan, then it was made in China, when Japan started advancing themselves, and the cost went up, which meant less to those CEO's. Add ontop of that all the smaller US companies think everything they make is gold. No....I'm not paying $100 for a shirt.
Dont worry though. China isn't going to be making our our junk for much longer. You will forced to buy mostly US overpriced products in the guise of "Freedom" after everyone starts fighting.
Get rid of trickle down tax and support workers will be painful but wealth redistribution down needs to happen, it will increase velocity of capital
@@BenSmith-cm8oc You don't make society better by seizing from those who earned it to give to those who didn't. Wealth does not increase through redistribution. It increases through creation. Pulling other people down doesn't pull you up.
As a hand weaver, I appreciate this :)
The discussion of knapping brought back memories for me. I worked in textiles for 10 years in the 90s. We should have listened to Ross Perot. NAFTA killed our textile industry
Facts.
Yep. I worked at a textile place, and myself and a friend left work one day, stopped at a convenience store and just happened to look down at the paper. Front page was that the place we worked at, and had just left, was closing. Next day they held a big meeting explaining that, yes, we were closing, and yes, the jobs were going overseas, and yes, it was because of NAFTA. It was awful.
I bought the Thorogood boots awesome product, made in the USA, Union made! Never had a break in period, instantly comfortable!! Midwest boots is the vendor
It's really hard to have a "support fellow Americans" mentality when you yourself do not feel supported by them. X tradesman.
The F ING MAGA hats were made in China! Nobody has your back!
Ken Oath! Thanks Mike and God bless America!
It isn't just economy of scale its the velocity of dollar, the dollar that is spent on quality local production has a higher velocity and more local staying power than the cheap alternative.
But but but commiefornia
@@HiDefHDMusic I'm intrigued by your misinterpretation of my statement. Go on..
@@brentblackburn976 I’m just calling Americans stupid idk what you expect
I buy all my clothes made in America. Round house jeans. Thorogood boots Vermont flannel. Randolph sun glasses are most of what I buy. Great stuff
What is driving companies out of the US is American wages, a cheap throw away mind set, and other production costs. Paying American wages to workers drives product costs up 10x. People don’t want to pay more for quality. Then you have out side costs like taxes, insurance, and energy. These costs are getting out of hand for any business. Don’t forget what most people don’t think about too with manufacturing, EPA and OSHA requirements.
As a small manufacturing company we are feeling the pressures. We often lose to the lower cost import products. You guys are also exactly right that American industry has had to not only compete with imports but with each other to the point that there is little to no profit left. The average profit margin for a machine shop manufacturing company in America is 5-8 percent. It honestly has to be a labor of love for an owner because you cannot make money or even have profit to grow off of that margin. In our shop things are cooling off which means we have to sell equipment to weather the economic storm then go buy it again when things are better. It is an insane cycle. On top of that we would love to pay our staff more but we just do not have it to offer. I am not sure where this spiral will end but I fear our country has not seen the worst of it yet.
Howcome you didn't put links to buy all that merch in in the video description? Seriously, Mike, I'm am horrible shopper. I WANT to be advertised to. And yet I run an adblocker because, turns out, I don't feel a need to meet hot singles in my area near so much as the Google skynet seems to think. I could really use a comfortable flannel and, since I don't plan on changing shirts for two weeks either, I don't mind spending on it. Mike, help us out here, leave links to worthwhile products. Just leave the hot singles out of it.
The company is American Giant. Men's flannel is goes for $168.
There was a documentary a few years ago by a guy that resolved to use only made in USA products for a year.
It was eye opening to see that many everyday things we use are hard if not impossible to find made in USA. Soap, detergent, hoses, shower heads,etc.
I have a dream, where the American people refuse to buy except from someone they've shaken hands with, where every govt action is taken out of fear that the people may revolt over it, that people use physical hard currency exclusively, and there is no property or inheritance taxes anywhere.
Excellent video. I agree bring business back home. I like to quilt. Very little fabric is manufactured in America. We have great artisans/designers and wholesale suppliers. There are several large online businesses to purchase order from. By the time fabric hits the home town shops, the cost can range from $12.00 per yard up to $20.00.😮 How can they stay in business. Support Americans by choosing to keep our business enterprises home your dollar will count. 🎶💐💖
The fabric would cost more than it does if it was all made in the US. Thats why textile manufacturing went overseas in the first place.
My father always told me, "You get what you pay for." But unfortunately, I think we have become a throw away world. Buy cheap, throw away, buy cheap again. Another thing I've noticed is the greed of these companies. They have to make billions so they can pay their CEO unprecedented bonuses. It's very sad. I pray we can fix this.
Blood will be spilled.
You have it backwards.
They make billions (which pay dividends into your retirement account) *because* they pay top dollar for executives.
@@dafunkmonsteryou think people still have retirement accounts? 😂 ok grandpa time to take your meds
I grew up in the 70's & learned from watching my parents shop, to buy American. I remember going to Sears w\Mom & she was always looking at the tags on clothing. When I questioned why she did that (because clothes was already divided by size), she explained to me how important it was to buy American. Both her & my Dad always preached to me that philosophy & I've watched the decline of American made products dwindle over the years & am saddened. Glad some stuck it out & others are coming back!
LOVE WOOLRICH & L.L. BEAN FLANNEL SHIRTS, although i only have a few. My thing is get good product, and not a whole lot of less than product.
According to the internet LL Bean flannel shirts are imported, most from Portugal.
You have not followed the herd down the consumerist dead end.
I downloaded Steven's book and in the first 2 minutes of listening there were at least 2 F bombs dropped. Before everyone goes nuts and starts criticizing my sensitivity. I just want to say that a little warning should have been given in case someone would prefer not listening/reading such.
Just saying.
PS: Mike I do appreciate your content.
What is the name of the brand of flannel shirt that Steven was talking about?
American Giant. They charge $168 for a men's flannel shirt.
Mike I hope one day you make a website to buy all these products that are made here in the USA. We really do need to start buying American made.
It is so easy to blame others for our poor decisions. Greedy businesses, incompetent govt, lazy youth... Be the change you wish to see in this world.
You deserve what you accept.
So, you walked around shareholder and consumer choices. Most shareholders want greater returns on their capital, and consumers are always looking for a bargain. Most don't want to reward labor with better wages if they don't have to.
Nooooooo Mike bring back the full episodes on here!!! I prefer seeing everyone's faces so much more!!
I think Terry Pratchett described it best with his Sam Vimes boots theory of economics. People know the Red Wings are far superior to the Wal-Mart boots. But, if they have to choose between buying the Red Wings and feeding their family...do they even really have a choice? Knowing that the $350 boots are better and will last you longer doesn't matter when you only have $50.
Unfortunately there are a lot of "Red Wing Boots" being made in china. You have to look for the MADE IN USA or you may be disappointed.
This is so true. Most people would much prefer to buy quality, made in USA items, but especially in the current economy, it's been made impossible to do. Maybe this is on purpose?
@@Crystal-iy4sinot impossible. Tricky. Not impossible. American Giant is a good example. Their clothes have a lifetime guarantee.
Over regulation is a major problem. I live in So Cal. A furniture factory recently shut down because the South Coast Air quality increase regulations. I grew up during the sixties, then the air was alway brown. The air is so clean today in comparison. They put 900 workers out of work for no reason.
An extra comment to help boost the RUclips algorithm!
One issue with clothing is in a lot of Europe, people tend to buy mainly classic traditional style clothes that will last a long time and don't mind paying for it. In the US, we are pushed to change our wardrobe with every new season.
The last time I tried to buy American made Redwing boots, I went to their store and most of the boots in the store were made in other countries.
I believe you are correct sir
Have never heard of the Red Wing refurbishment program. How do you get this information disseminated so the consumer has an option rather than just going to the local department store?
This started at lest by 1973,Philly had a big textile industry. The company I worked for leased a knitting mill as a warehouse the machines were still there. Ran by punch cards, sold as scrap.
Mike Rowe is highly educated and I’d bet money no one in his family has gone to or is going to a trade school . He’s found a niche and he’s very good at it .
I went to school and achieved the skills of a journeyman commercial electrician in California back in 2015 I topped out at 80k a year working for a non union small contractor. In 2020 I moved to south Carolina and the best pay I could find in one of the fastest growing community's was $20/hr with no benefits or even overtime. Because of the ( the cost of living is cheaper here ) mindset of the south, I left that field of work and have sence been working as a contractor for a mobile RV roofing company. I have large expenses, but my labor is compensated at a rate I am comfortable with. I won't be able to buy a home or a fancy new truck, or even a vacation once a year. But I am able to enjoy myself and buy the quality items from professional craftsman. I guess it all boils down to priorities
What's the name of the shirt company?
American Giant
I still remember being in southern Alabama and, in the small town, that there was fabric and clothing being made and was a job producing industry. Now it’s no longer there and the town and America has suffered.
Ah, you guys really want to get me started on this topic?
Listen, all the talk about bringing manufacturing back is nice, but it's never going to happen. Why? Because for all that people say they want it.... they really don't. Lots of talk, sure, but when given the choice, they will always opt for the cheaper mass-produced chicom merchandise. Always. And while that might seem a little mean to say, we have to look at what's changed over the years.
As something of an amateur historian of the traditional trades, and a blacksmith, I love going back through the old books to see how things were done in days past. Once you do that long enough, though, you start seeing patterns emerge.
There are two vectors attacking the working folks - their own myopia and greed.
Every notice how everyone loves to talk about the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back, but never the million straws that came before it and how all those straws made it impossible for the camel to be healthy and productive? The average American is terribly myopic and greedy, and thus easily talked into shooting themselves in the foot. We want the cheapest goods possible, but also always demand the highest wages we can get. We claim we want manufacturing at home, but then we support things that make it almost impossible for there to be manufacturing here in the States - and Western Nations, in general. And when you bring up these issues, the people will fight you tooth and nail, call you all sorts of names, and deny the facts that are plainly evident if you read up on the history of things.
I tell folks that everything that was once produced in The Rust Belt is still produced, just not here. The trick is looking at what changed, what happened to make a thriving center of manufacturing that raised up the entire world.... into a hellscape of poverty, drugs, crime, and sorrow. What happened?
When you look at it honestly, you see that it was a combination of things, all targeted at actually destroying manufacturing, and sold to the uninformed citizenry as somehow to their benefit. Every day, new taxes, regulations, policies and laws were enacted at the local, state, and federal levels. No single one of those things was horrible, but when you pile thousands of straws on the camel's back, it's only a matter of time before the camel collapses.
Today, everything that used to be made in the Rust Belt is still being made, but we managed to somehow make it more economical to have the stuff made on the other side of the earth and shipped halfway around the world to a store near us.... rather than right down the road. Think about that for a minute. It's cheaper to make something thousands of miles away instead of a dozen miles away.
Once you realize that, you can start looking at what makes it so expensive to operate CONUS. And once you look into it, and see how heavy the tax and regulation burden is, it's no wonder that people are shutting down their businesses, or refusing to start up new enterprises.
As a blacksmith, I deal with this regularly and hear it from hundreds of other craftsmen. It'd be nice to hire in some help, but what a nightmare that presents when you get into the details of what it means to have an employee. Think about it for a minute. If I hire someone at $30,000/yr, that sounds nice, but that means I have to have a minimum of $30,000 in sales every single year just to cover that employee's wages. Where are those sales coming from? Where are the customers? If you talk to craftsmen who will be honest with you, they'll tell you that customers are very hard to come by even though people say they want quality craftsmanship and fine work, jobs at home, etc. The difference is that they want it, but want it at cheap third-world prices.
Why is it so expensive? Taxes, regulations, policies, laws, all the things that people support at the local level adds up, and nobody wants to admit that they were wrong. You want a minimum wage? Great, but it's going to cost you because it drives up the prices on all the goods and services you buy since ALL employees everywhere get that same pay raise. You want to open your doors to millions of immigrants every year, fine, but it's going to cost you. They need jobs, too, and that competition for work will drive the wages down since there's always someone willing to work for a dollar less.
On and on it goes. There's no stopping it because nobody is willing to give up their own pet project, the thing they want most of all. Promise them something from the public coffers and they'll be on your leash forever.
For 25 years I have purchased from and worked with a manufacturing company who makes over 400 home consumable products. Made in the USA the same or less than the products people buy in the store or online comes down to a very smart businessman who’s also not greedy to make this happen.
Mike Rowe made more per episode than most of his subjects on dirty jobs will make their entire lives. His opinions are not worth much, just has a great voice. We can can thank the Walton's and short term profit minded corporations for our current predicament, once Walmart pushed everybody to produce in china everybody else had to follow in oder to compete... it was a boon for the rich and a disaster for our country. Yea team billionaire !
All good points. The path to raising prosperity for working class America is through the trades, not clothing manufacturer. We most certainly should bring manufacturing back to America, but the good paying jobs will be restricted to the clothing/pattern designers and the technicians keeping all the high-end automation running.