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Where have all the factories gone, long time passing...?Submitted by Jeff Buster on Wed, 04/14/2010 - 09:35.
America has been closing its mills and factories for decades – and sticking its head in the sand about the issue.
Now we are a “high tech” and “service oriented” economy – because, as President Bush often said, “Americans don’t want to do this work”.
The mill room in the image above was used to blend chemicals for the plastic and rubber coating of fabrics – this particular factory at one time sold bolts of fabric to Detroit automakers for seat covering.
Of course, during the hundred years the factory was in operation, they liberally soaked the ground with toluene, naphtha, fuel oil, and everything else they used in their manufacturing processes.
When the factory closed about 20 years ago – they just left everything in the building – explosion proof vacuum pumps, drum mixers, overhead blending conveyors, the works.
Then nature, in the form of graffiti creation, began to take back the buildings.
For me, this image is an accurately lurid representation of the our present chaos as American workers flounder with nothing to do….
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“It may be we have to shift jobs to Mexico or China,” Mixon said
Our Federal healthcare dollars go to fund factories in China to make wheelchairs for people harmed by industrial/corporate America here... and the people behind all that are treated as heroes here.
About Invacare... from Cleveland.com, 2008: Invacare's embrace of China spurs comeback
And the Invacare Chairman's Christmas Card to America, 2009, regarding Invacare fighting Healthcare reform, from last December 25th, in The Elyria Chronical...Invacare chief says health care bill will force company to move jobs to China:
Our Officers
A. Malachi Mixon, IIIChairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
Mixon has led the company since 1979 when he and a group of Cleveland based investors bought Invacare from then parent Johnson & Johnson. He serves on the boards of several Cleveland area corporations and civic organizations, including chairmanship of the world-renowned Cleveland Clinic. Mixon is highly regarded in the Cleveland business community and has been recognized nationally for his entrepreneurial skill and leadership. He received his education, BA and MBA from Harvard, and served four years in the Marine Corps prior to launching his business career.
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Thanks Jeff
Great photo--as disheartening as it may seem to folks, especially if you read the Plain Dealer--I don't happen to think that NEO is a great failure in manufacturing and industry. We may have failed leadership, but ultimately we have location and despite the F-ups in this town, it is a great place to live. I just returned form Austin TX. I love my sister and I love what she does to make the world a better place, but Texas is NOT a hospitable place to live. NEO is a hospitable place to LIVE. And, we have amenities galore. Believe me, people will know it. Young people will know it. And they will come here, because they will need a place to REALLY be able to LIVE.
Texas is NOT a hospitable place but Austin is amazing
Austin was green when most Americans thought it's not easy being green... their hippies never sold-out.
Very hospitable city! And really focused on being green - and being open source.
Until our region gets serious about pollution and remediation of our toxic state, we are not hospitable to families. I'll argue that to my children's graves.
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Austin is not GREEN
Talk about toxins. You can not get anywhere in Austin without driving. Period. It's one superhighway after another. Like I said--I love my sister and I love what she appreciates in Texas, but it's not the quality of life I would look for in a community. Just my opinion.
Photo of car after car at the Lady Bird Wildflower Center in Austin TX
I lived in Austin for a year without a car
I lived in Austin for a year without a car - I was one of those 1,000s of bicycle riders all over town - it never rains... you can ride anywhere, and they have those great hills - spring fed Barton Creek - hydro power - green zoning for decades - source of zeroscaping - but sprawl is everywhere... not all people are green.
I lived right downtown, and it was paradise.
Did the air seem fresh and clean?
I really miss living in Austin.
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Air quality today in Cleveland vs. Austin
According to NOACA, the air quality in Cleveland today was moderate at best - http://ohioair.info/quality/currentmapPM25.asp
According to the TCEQ, Austin Air Quality today was good - http://www.tceq.state.tx.us/cgi-bin/compliance/monops/aqi_rpt.pl?metro:5
I'll take good over moderate at best any day.
Austin probably wins this race every day.
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And the freeways are lined with wildflowers
Claudia Alta "Lady Bird" Taylor Johnson in the Austin Hill County she loved, in 1990
And the freeways are lined with wildflowers, thanks to Lady Bird, who still lived in downtown Austin when I lived there, about when this photo was taken, and was still much beloved. Much of the greenness in Austin and America may be credited to her.
Read her amazing bio on Wikipedia and wish we had such leadership influences living here, EVER!
Just a few highlights from her remarkable life and career:
That is how a community becomes the brightest and greenest in the world... great leaders caring and doing until they die...
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You win
I am going to bed. I ride my bike here in Cleveland as much as I can. It seems that I can't out last you in anything, but since I have never seen you on a bike I might be able to outlast you there. Let's see a photo of that:)
My bike was stollen by my old landlord
It was a vintage Colnago with full Campy Super - very fast, even pulling a trailer full of kids. I miss it.
I've been watching Craig's list for a cheap beater
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I worked with Austin Power - even their utility is cool
I've worked with Austin Public Power, among scores of utility companies - even their utility is cool (don't know the status of this project)
Austin taught me there was such a thing as a Green Movement nearly 20 years ago.... can't put them down for that legacy.
They were also one of the most progressive GLBT communities I ever saw, way back then... I assume they still are today.
And those bats - in Cleveland, we would have found a way to kill them.
Amazing city.
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