Nope. I don't listen to right-wing economists who hawk free trade. Never have.
Anyone who supports free trade is right wing, economically speaking.
Wrong again. I rely on only the facts and common sense. Not on the opinions of others, including talking heads.
Then why do I keep seeing the same arguments parroted by the same people? I've been hearing the same BS arguments since before NAFTA was passed (along with the usual lame insults that people who disagree are "ignorant," etc.). "We are now in a global economy" was the popular phrase at the time (as if the "global economy" didn't exist before the 1990s). Republicans pushed full tilt to get NAFTA passed, and Clinton was also instrumental in using the Democratic Party muscle to bring in those who were against it. Not a single Republican opposed NAFTA, so free trade is most definitely a right-wing invention.
Sure. Free trade is the absolute best thing for us.
This is why I dismiss such statements as propaganda. The "absolute best thing"? Seriously?
TPP was a geo-political tool that would have given us leverage with China. We would have been able to go to the table, tell them that every single country around them (worth a dime ... N. Korea doesn't matter regarding trade) is our trading partner and not theirs, and it would have forced them to play fair. Now they have absolutely no reason to play fair.
No one ever has any reason to play fair, unless they want fair treatment for themselves.
Steel, for example, is something that the Republicans are trying to artificially protect. Steel manufacturing is not important to the US economy, or at least it is not nearly as important as getting the cheapest steel no matter where it comes from. People who are ignorant of the big picture say, "the steel workers wouldn't agree", but for every 1 steel job, there are about 100 manufacturing jobs that rely on cheap steel. If we artificially increase the price of steel to help US steel manufacturers, we hurt literally every manufacturer who uses steel. Thus, it is far better to open up free trade for steel, possibly killing US steel mills, as it will help every industry that relies on cheap steel.
I'm not sure how it can be blamed solely on the Republicans. Democrats have been traditionally pro-union, so they too would have an interest in protecting their constituents in the Rust Belt.
However, I don't think it's really a matter of pressuring the workers. If we really want cheap steel, then the thing to do would be to pressure the executives of the steel companies, not the workers. The executives set the price, and greed is the only explanation for why the prices are so high.
Manufacturing in the US was not killed by trade deals. That is a dangerous, ignorant myth.
This is part of the reason why your statements come off as propagandistic. To use emotionally-derived invective like "dangerous, ignorant myth" makes your position one of melodrama than facts. There's nothing "dangerous" about it at all.
Automation is killing manufacturing in the US. If you look at the increase in manufacturing in the U.S. and massive decrease of manufacturing jobs, it becomes painfully obvious. It is not trade, it is increased efficiency and automation.
The manufactured items we import are NOT made by robots. If they were, they could be just as easily made in the US - and your "sky is falling" rhetoric about protectionism would be completely irrelevant. Protectionism would be a non-issue if everything was made domestically by robots. The fact that you and so many others go into a virtual panic every time someone even
thinks about questioning free trade is proof positive that your statement above is totally false.
Manufacturing jobs are never coming back in the U.S. Just like coal workers, the only responsible thing to do is to accept this and help manufacturing and coal workers find new careers. Lying to them, and having them cling to the "fake news" that Trump is going to somehow, miraculously bring back jobs that are no longer needed is cruel and irresponsible.
Look, we're not talking about 19th century jobs or products that nobody uses anymore. We're talking about manufactured products that people still buy and use, and which are made overseas by (deeply exploited)
human labor, not machines. We still use coal, too.