[snip]
What industry would be the question gov't agencies should be answering and policy trying to provide for. Dem platform last year talked about funding green energy stuff to come into such regions, as a singular example. It obviously wouldn't be enough on its own, but it'd be one more brick in a new foundation. Exact options depend on the situation on the ground, and many potentials would probably take government/non-profit investment to bring to the table since for-profit stuff just isn't going to bloody happen under local conditions. But you do have to actually go out and try to bloody find them instead of throwing your hands in the air and trying to shore up an industry that's already proven it can't manage what you need.
Retraining et al does indeed take time and effort, and what options are available are largely not going to be what was there before. That doesn't mean it's not what has to happen if things are going to not go to pot. It just means the GOP in particular fucked 'em by doing everything in their power to prevent the process from starting a decade or four ago, and the chicken's coming home to roost. If the situation needed tens of thousands to become a different type of laborer, we should have been working through that back when the process was going to hurt less. We didn't and now we're here, still dealing with the same necessity but with less time before situations turn even more critical and a greater number of options cut off before they could be attempted.
What's failed the average american isn't free trade -- it's probably one of the primary catalysts, but it's not the
cause -- it's our government's refusal to react to it properly and our populace's continued insistence on electing people that make sure the refusal's happening. What that means is that the only way these places are going to survive in even a diminished state is start trying to fix the bloody problem instead of claw back a yesterday that no longer can exist without things going to complete hell, and suck up their pride in the mean time and request and accept what help they need to keep them alive while they're doing it. Or these regions are going to die, at the absolute least until they contract into much smaller entities.
Lot of these areas are going to need life support regardless, and there's fuck all we can do about that at this point, unless we really are going to just let them die and to hell with the populations within. Starting the retraining processes, finding out what's needed to bring things in or figuring out where the people need to go to manage, is going to be the difference between going on life support so you can heal and indeed just ruddy giving up.
... though even if it's the latter, we can at least work to let the areas die in peace instead of forcing everyone inside them to suffer for the failures of their forefathers. It's better than what the GOP is trying to force happen.
All that said, though, even without automation looming, bringing back manufacturing isn't even an imperfect solution, just an inefficient way to attempt to stem the bleeding. It's been dead in the water so far as these regions go since the day productivity started to increase (which is basically to say since day 1), and there's sod all that can be done about that. Even trying to artificially cripple the industry's output is just going to mean people buy elsewhere, losing chunks of whatever part the market a hold
was kept on. Trying to rely on an industry that just flat out doesn't need as many workers is going to do nothing but put you in worse shape than you were previously, and without any road forward to improve things. Even without technological advancements, raw methodological ones would have still been contracting that particular work force.
Domestic manufacturing is always going to be part of what we do, but it very literally can't -- physically can't, without all kinds of incredibly terrible shit happening -- be something we rely on anymore. It just doesn't friggin'
work, and trying to convince communities it can is doing nothing but making sure they die and die as painfully as possible. Foreign competition isn't what's causing that (though it accelerates and exaggerates), it's just the nature of the work involved. We got too good at it, we're still getting better, and unless we start murdering everyone else that figures out how to do that, trying to roll back the clock on that front is just going to make everything about the process worse.
E: And in other news,
fuck. Cheers GOP voters, yet another attempt at privacy protection struck down by the bastards you voted for. Except for those that elected the 15 that give even the intermittent appearance of a single shit about the electorate, I guess. I guess it's conceptually possible trump vetoes i- yeah, I can't even finish typing that.