"fair trade" reliance on buzz-words, ambiguity, jargon
"poverty"
"suitable wages"
"hard and useful work"
It's all relative when you throw around terms like these. The meaning changes drastically from one context to another. The "fair" in "fair trade" is an example.
But the word "crybaby" is not such a word. This is anyone who demands a benefit to his/her group which imposes cost onto all the others, making almost everyone worse off -- e.g., the "working poor" in developed countries whining about how they suffer "inequality" but oblivious to their privileged status.
I have answered again and again, only to have the points brushed aside. If you think that there is nothing wrong with working full time yet struggling to meet the basic needs of life, you have no idea. You are unable to mentally put yourself in that situation or understand it.
Your points get brushed aside because you're basically preaching.
This time you present an article--but it's got a big problem. The harms it talks about are due to poverty, not due to inequality. Poverty is harmful, duh!
Just so that it is absolutely clear for the peanut gallery: poverty, in the presence of wealth, and . . .
Which "poverty"? where? When you use the word "poverty" to refer to the poor in the U.S. (and Britain or other developed countries), it does not mean the same as "poverty" in Africa and Haiti and Bangladesh, etc. This distortion of a word then really abrogates whatever follows. (The phrase "in the presence of wealth" does not clarify the meaning.)
Compared to those 3rd-world countries, the "poor" in the U.S. are NOT in "poverty" but are acquisitive and greedy and avaricious. They are unequally blessed and are depriving the poor in those countries by some of the demands they make. The "poor" in the U.S. (or many of them) are exploiting and cheating and oppressing the poor in those countries, and help to cause that famine and suffering by their selfishness and greed, which is even worse than the greed of the super-rich.
. . . in the situation wherein the poor are unable to leverage suitable wages despite hard . . .
What is "suitable"?
Everyone, even the super-rich, can whine that they're afflicted with "inequality" because what they earn is not "suitable" (in their mind) based on what they merit through their productive effort. So they're "unequal" compared to others who are even more super-rich.
Or -- at the other end -- even the "poor" in the U.S. and in Britain and other developed countries are
blessed with unequal wealth superiority over the "poor" in 3rd-world countries where those workers can't get "suitable" wages such as the "poor" get in a developed country.
. . . in the situation wherein the poor are unable to leverage suitable wages despite hard and useful work, IS inequality.
Yes, the inequality is that of
the poor in Africa vs. the "poor" in the U.S. The latter are the ones who have unequal superiority over the former.
And Donald Trump was helping to increase the superiority of some U.S. "poor" over the poor of China and other countries. He brought (maybe not as much as he claimed) jobs back from China, such as steel-worker jobs, so that U.S. steel-workers could receive even more unequally-higher wages than before, i.e., higher than what Chinese steel-workers are paid (and also higher than most U.S. non-steel-workers who are just as valuable).
So Trump was meeting the demand of U.S. working "poor" and labor unions, to increase their wages more unequally higher than they already were (and also auto-workers and some others), to satisfy their demand for more inequality (compared to Africa and China and Bangladesh, etc.), but more equality to some super-rich in the U.S.
It's all relative to whatever "poor" or rich you're comparing them too.
Of course, taking care of
our own "working poor" is the priority for America, according to the labor union crybaby philosophy (meaning not all Americans or all poor, but all the privileged union members and other high-profile "poor" who got included in the protected class), so we must "bring back" the jobs, the factories, to provide "hard and useful work" -- "useful" means good makework jobs to keep the rabble off the streets so they won't go on a rampage -- and the Chinese and others
have to go find their OWN "useful" makework programs and factory jobs (babysitting slots) for their own rabble, and stop stealing ours! We need to keep our "factory jobs" here (babysitting slots) to provide these "hard and useful work" babysitting slots for our own crybabies and rabble riff-raff, and cannot take on the responsibility of providing jobs to all the rest of the world's rabble poor masses.
I.e., creating "jobs" for them is a favor to the hapless victim worthless rabble masses, to meet their need to be kept out of mischief -- not society's need for their contribution to the economy -- but their need to be pacified and society's need for them to be prevented from rioting and destroying.
I.e., it's all about
"jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs! jobs!" for crybabies or potential trouble-makers.
So your boy Trump was trying to even the scales at least a little, to make U.S. workers a little more equal to the super-rich U.S. executives, or ameliorate the inequality, while at the same time
increasing the inequality of some U.S. "poor" workers compared to 3rd world workers -- (but of course that particular inequality is OK -- we can ignore that inequality and injustice and injury to the whole economy, because it's not part of the Left-wing labor union agenda). I.e., not the "greatest good for the greatest number" but the greatest good to those aggressive whining crybabies who scream the loudest and throw the most tantrum. More privilege to the already privileged (below the top 10% or 20%), but not to the entire broad lower class.
That's largely what
"fair trade" really means: I.e., trying to increase the wage level of some high-profile workers already doing much better (perhaps unionized), and doing this by stomping down hard on other workers and poor who are far worse off, and who are made
even more worse off by "fair trade" which makes it illegal to hire them at compensation levels employers are willing to pay them.
I.e., "fair trade" means increasing the incomes of some workers already far privileged way above other workers who are much worse off, and making these latter even worse off yet, by shutting off opportunities to them to be able to compete in the labor market. Such as by making their sweatshop job illegal, or trying to shut down their sweatshop job by means of boycotts and other forms of suppressing the production.
(and maybe by reducing "independent contractor" jobs? -> less production -> worse economy overall)
I.e., "fair trade" = class privilege, inequality, and privilege to some workers (possibly unionized to protect their privileged status), at the cost of suppressing others much worse off, such as would-be workers and others in real poverty who cannot get hired.
Inequality of U.S. poor vs. 3rd-world poor
And this INEQUALITY is just as real as that between U.S. working "poor" and super-rich executives, but U.S. working "poor" crusaders, labor unions, etc. are totally oblivious to this inequality, and have to pretend that it doesn't exist, in order to push their demands.
But by contrast,
"free trade" means to let all producers everywhere compete -- open the market to all of them with no one privileged or protected from competing, reduce/eliminate barriers across boundaries -- and don't obsess on any one crybaby group's demand to be made more equal to someone else, because any obsession on this or that alleged inequality necessarily requires ignoring some other inequality elsewhere which will be made even worse. Rather, the best overall result happens if all are encouraged to compete -- all the rich and poor free to trade with any other -- regardless who does better than another in the competition, as long as free choice is always preserved to every individual player.
(And "free choice" does not mean there are no inequalities or limitations imposed by nature, but rather that no players may impose their terms onto others by coercion or threats of retaliation. So the poor can transact with the super-rich, and this is still "free choice" no matter how unequal or limited anyone is compared to another.)