Those who are old enough to remember Ross Perot and his warning about the “giant sucking sound as businesses leave this country” know he was so right about NAFTA.
@yurimodin73337 ай бұрын
I was a RP fan and I wasn't even in middle school yet. Yes I am kind of a wierdo but even I could understand it in 3rd grade.
@k9er2337 ай бұрын
It makes you wonder if RP had 8 years in the white house instead of what we ended up with, how different the American manufacturing landscape would be today.
@rjbz5547 ай бұрын
yep
@MrJohnnyDistortion7 ай бұрын
Yes. I remember. He pulled out of the presidential race because they were attacking his family and the corrupt politicians became upset and threatened. I remember his out of pocket infomercials. The original MAGA in my opinion.
@Mr81smc7 ай бұрын
I understood, but the average thought he was just lying then we ended up with Clinton, what a disaster.
@sheehy9337 ай бұрын
I tell people this...for every transgression China commits against the U.S. there is a U.S. politician or corporation fascilitating and benefiting from that transgression.
@k9er2337 ай бұрын
You've got that right.
@MrJohnnyDistortion7 ай бұрын
That's what I just posted.
@alexdetrojan45347 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@qoph19887 ай бұрын
Benefiting a little in the short term, sure, especially legislators... Corps not so much. This type of stuff isn't really done for reasons of greed or profit, that's just an easy excuse that is not controversial to say. The real reason this keeps happening is because Joe McCarthy was 100% correct, and what that implies.
@obeseperson7 ай бұрын
@@qoph1988isn’t that dude long dead though?
@jimmy_olds7 ай бұрын
But hey, at least our politicians are multimillionaires and billionaires!
@hippie-io72257 ай бұрын
Would you call it "psychopath enrichment program" ?
@k9er2337 ай бұрын
@@hippie-io7225 That is exactly what it is. Well coined.
@hobbyhermit667 ай бұрын
So are theirs
@rgregoryful7 ай бұрын
THOSE are not OUR politicians, but I get what you are saying.
@magikindian7 ай бұрын
That's because americans are clueless suckers with a mighty low standard of living. Maybe in 200 years when you finally reach puberty and your millitery has exhausted all the countries resources, maybe then yall will operate like a country instead of showing off to the world how you can bully others for a used pair of tennis shoes.
@terrific8047 ай бұрын
As a specifying engineer, now retired, I told my cohorts for decades not to specify things from overseas, that it would ruin our country gutting our manufacturing base... they wouldn't listen.
@englastanianss38716 ай бұрын
. ....ruin your country? ....People in your country should have also told Military personnel .... to not kill innocents ....the CIA not to destabilise foreign Countries ....the Ambassadors ........not to aid and install oppressive regimes/ dictators .....and Congress to not suppply billions in Aid and weapons.... to fuel Wars, Massacres and War crimes Maybe they would listen ..... .....and then not do all the other Fukrey .....YOUR country has done..... 'ruining' places around the world...... and is still doing to this day .
@djtripnosys5 ай бұрын
We cant afford to. Uncle Sam charging 3x what others charge.
@glennjames71077 ай бұрын
As far as Walmart goes, they swept across the nation building their business on made in the USA being their policy. Then after they had built a borderline monopoly throughout the states, and ran nearly every small business out, Sam Walton, the business's founder dies and his family takes over. After that, they pretty much immediately did away with the policy of selling only made in the US goods, and promptly became an unbelievably huge outlet for Chinese goods !
@jorgeharo79377 ай бұрын
I remember them getting busted putting made in the USA stickers on Chinese products. I also remember a 60 minutes segment about a plasma tv maker being forced by Walmart to relocate his factory to China or lose his Walmart contract.
@scottsmith13866 ай бұрын
Wow. I had forgotten that Walmart used to tout selling "Made in the USA"!! You are totally correct!
@The_R-n-I_Guy7 ай бұрын
The worst part of it all is. We're paying more now for cheap knock-off parts than we used to pay for quality parts we made here.
@Dratchev2417 ай бұрын
that is thanks to the devalued USD. all started thanks to the fed reserve act 1913. and this is how bad it is in just 30 years. say I sold a part in 1994 for 1oz gold. it would cost you $200 in 2024 I still sell same part same price 1oz gold but now it costs you $2400 and that is with the fed manipulating the gold market with fake paper gold that don't exist. (real gold value should be 10K+)
@tl51087 ай бұрын
@@goldenhawk352yeah Chinese casting and tactics aren’t near as good
@richardprice59787 ай бұрын
@@goldenhawk352 1969 front charger's 383+auto ( aka really could have been bad and no working/installed seatbelts etc ) drums and hydraulics failures 3X-time's after that in 2015~ i promised myself it was time to disks-usa swap, they couldn't read southerners 🇺🇸 ( fenton mo-plant ) english or understand measuring 60's standards so parts were done using metric-standards etc 🤦🏻♂ glad i didn't hurt someone
@bufords7 ай бұрын
@@goldenhawk352 nonsense, there is good quality Chinese and bad. They make to order like everyone else. So if you tell them to make it outta crap they will.
@ktung75527 ай бұрын
@@goldenhawk352 Just like anything. You have to pay more for quality. If you ask for more quality, the chinese manufacturer will have to charge more for time and material. Chinese can make quality products cheaper than american companies. But like this man's opinion in the video, the importer wants the cheapest price for the item produced with acceptable quality.
@Asswease17 ай бұрын
We were going to be a "service economy" and use our brains instead of our hands, but if we had any brains we wouldn't have fallen for it.
@SweatyFatGuy7 ай бұрын
I didn't fall for it, I learned skills, trades, and a lot of other things. Never did retail, foodservice, or cubicle/office jobs. Everything I did was tech and mechanical related.
@thefreedomguyuk7 ай бұрын
Indeed. You will own nothing, and you will be happy !
@thefreedomguyuk7 ай бұрын
@@SweatyFatGuyThat will not help you at all !! 😮
@alertgasper7 ай бұрын
any economy that creates a middle class, forms a service economy. heck, we keep saying "china" but they make their cheap crap in Vietnam, Thailand, etc. Sad problem was, accountants used their brains to say outsourcing was cheaper, and the CEO showed it to the shareholders who let him keep his job and take a raise for it. now today's high school graduates are thinking Vo Tech schools might make more sense than colleges.
@themaverickmechanic72407 ай бұрын
Same thing happened with a lot of the new diagnostic equipment. US manufacturers had all that locked down at an extremely high price point. Then the Chinese bootlegged as much manufacturer specific tech as possible and loaded it all into an affordable tool that the average guy or mom and pop could afford. There are certain aspects that small garages can take advantage of to compete with the big dealers.
@chrishensley67457 ай бұрын
I miss the old America for sure.
@brianalbrecht44237 ай бұрын
boy...& how...!...!..
@irocitZ7 ай бұрын
Me too, I especially miss coming up to a red light looking over in the other lane and not seeing some dopey kid reving the engine in his POS hotrod version of a BMW or Mercedes. Usually I just ignore them as best I can.
@bccev7707 ай бұрын
And Australia...😏
@Schlipperschlopper7 ай бұрын
recently I opened sealed boxes from 1990 with Manley Severe Duty pro Flo 2.02 and 1.60 SBC HQ valves...I bought them 35 years ago at Summit....the runout on the heads was horrible had to put them in the trash wouldnt seal in my Edelbrock Performer RPM heads and those valves were not counterfeits this was US made vintage valve crap....Dont understand this. It seems that Manley had quality issues in the early 1990s on their US production facilities and no QC.
@alertgasper7 ай бұрын
@@Schlipperschlopper in the 1990's, there was a rash of counterfeit OEM parts. Boxes would have the Mopar logo on them but the colors wouldn't be inside the lines, etc. And those of us working on cars back in the 1970's remember buying cheap crap from JC Whitney etc catalogs and in the 1950's it was Almquist et al
@michaelgrasso45537 ай бұрын
Tony you’re absolutely right we were sold out by ourselves. This is where corporate greed and corrupt elected officials lead us to. If this is to be stopped, we need to create term limits for elected officials, get rid of lobbyist money in our political system, and better enforce our imports and copyright laws.
@jeffreyburress22007 ай бұрын
Tony, you are totally right. The greedy politicians, big corporations, unreasonable unions, people sueing at the drop of a hat has lead to this. I work near the main north/south Norfolk Southern railroad line from Cincinnati to Atlanta. Trains every ten to fifteen minutes totally loaded down with import trailers.....and thats just one rail line.
@dalewarriorofthesea39987 ай бұрын
Sold out for profit And purchased into destruction Exact same thing has happened in Australia
@outlawbillionairez97807 ай бұрын
Thatcherism and our Reaganomics says all that matters is profits with no interference or regulation from government. This is the end result. What's funny is, they are happy to make profit in a dictatorship, which is what they called America when they were here.
@rcnelson7 ай бұрын
Uncle makes some good points, but ultimately it's us, the consumers, that cut our own throats. Why did American companies go to China for parts and tools? Because we were too damn cheap to pay for well-made products. As soon as the companies found out that cutting their price one buck had Americans flooding them with orders, away they went in a race to the bottom. Of course it's too late to change now. Witness the very recent UTG clip on the mickey mouse China-made winches. Nearly every comment praised Harbor Freight and Chinese garbage because they could save a buck, and to hell with sturdy products. After all, if the piece of junk imported tool fails quickly, who cares? Just buy another, and another. Commenters here can find the culprit in all of this by looking in the mirror.
@peterselten5007 ай бұрын
I was going to say it also an we sold out to save a dollar
@the_bunse7 ай бұрын
30 years ago I spoke with an owner of a company and he was moving his manufacturing from the US and Mexico to China as it was so cheap and would save him money. 20 years ago I met him again and he was upset as another factory in China was copying his goods and selling it cheaper back to the US. He could not stop it and did not know what to do. Some years later I learnt that he had gone out of business which was no suprise to me. I was not asked for advice, I just listened, I knew when he was moving to China he would have issues. People do not understand that in China there is no such thing as licensing or copyright the Chinese government have to find work for a lot of people. You wil see the same product made in different Chinese factories to different quality levels this kills the market in the rest of the world. This is the reason you cannot find quality items in a lot of sectors anymore because people buy the cheapest product and dont care where it was made. Sad but true.
@Corn_Pops_Rusty_Razor7 ай бұрын
These products wouldn't exist if Americans didn't buy based on price. Instead of buying american made or from the company that invented/created the product, they buy the chinese knock-off on amazon. But sure blame the corporations.
@KevinKimmich440247 ай бұрын
Many people in the US throw 10%+ of their income into a 401(k) every single payday. That money goes to wall street banks and corporations. Those companies looked to "cut costs" and corporate execs and shareholders lined their pockets with that money for the past several decades. They shipped jobs overseas the entire time I've been working since the 1990s looking to pay people slave wages. US politicians from both parties helped this transition the whole time. It's hilarious when they complain about China now. The whole nation has been sleepwalking into a world they didn't want to live in.
@hippie-io72257 ай бұрын
"They" also don't teach us how to be truly wealthy. During 2008, my father in law lost 50% of his 401K "wealth". What a scam. True wealth: Healthy body, mind, relationships. Billionaire suicide is actually a thing.
@stevenebesni24327 ай бұрын
It is still mind boggling to me that it is cheaper for companies to make products in China, pack them, put them in a shipping container, on a boat, sail across half of the world, unload them, get them in a truck, drive them across the country and sell them. Compared to making something in America, put it on a truck and drive it to market.
@ricksanchez74597 ай бұрын
The usps subsidized it
@sydrider60237 ай бұрын
That is exactly why the value and quality of the product you have in your hands is very low compared to the price you paid so every companies you described makes profit.
@rod.h80647 ай бұрын
@@ricksanchez7459 they have to due to treaties
@robbieracer32947 ай бұрын
All for a country that is actively trying to take us down. It's mind boggling we keep giving them business when they know how much they are trying to to shut our infrastructure down on a daily basis with their hackers. They've already hacked many of our weapons/designs. But....the government bends the knee , pats them on the back and still does business with them. Mind boggling
@thefreedomguyuk7 ай бұрын
It is not cheaper. YOU have always been manipulated to pay for all that shipping !!😮
@AutomotiveAdventuresWithAustin7 ай бұрын
The more of us out here drawing attention to this and talking about it the better! Kudos to you UTG and UTG nation jumping on this issue and helping to spread the word! Nothing will change unless WE force things to change!
@bbivens82637 ай бұрын
Yep Tony, the Chinese knock of everything. I`m a retired Machinist, I have my own shop. A friend bought me a set of "high performance" aluminum Chevy Big Block heads, the holes for the rocker studs were stripped out, they pulled out, he told me they were Chinese! They had already welded up the holes and wanted me to re-drill and tap them for Helicoils, but there was no way for me to even locate the holes after they had been welded up! I had no specs to go by! The aluminum was very soft too. Maybe I could have located the holes off the valve guides, I don`t know, didn`t care. I told him I couldn`t do it, he understood, they were cheap heads his boss bought for a monster engine, yet his boss is a multi millionaire who could easily afford some quality American heads. I order alloy steels, aluminum, and titanium, it all comes from China!!!! We only have a couple of small specialty steel plants left in America, and they are struggling. Obama shut down our last Lead smelting plant in Arkansas, we get lead for bullets from recycled car batteries,..... You`re right, we lost WWIII.
@dddevildogg7 ай бұрын
That damned Obama ! How did he get elected anyway?
@JoelBergmark7 ай бұрын
What you say is only half the story, as someone working with Chinese companies and work for one, majority of manufacturers in China is doing what their customers is ordering, meaning someone Contract them to produce it at the quality the ordering party wants. Some causes for sure are copycats others is fraudulent. But it's not Chinese manufacturers fault they produce what they are contracted for.
@bbivens82637 ай бұрын
It is the Chinese`s fault. When they blatantly take a part and copy it without regard for patents or copyrights. As the valve body that Tony is talking about even has the name engraved into it. An American company would find themselves in court. You`ve been there too long, you even write like they do.@@JoelBergmark
@johnmadow53317 ай бұрын
I am having diffculty to locate a real American Machine Shop in Maryland in 2024 nevermind locate a live Machinist,. PS When I was laid off in 2024, I received a call from government counselor advisor for education training and I asked for school that teach Machinist, and the "foot path" counselor can not understand what the hell the Machinist is about!
@davidst.pierre28767 ай бұрын
Amen! We need to start over. UT for Pres.
@MarineGrunt7 ай бұрын
You left out one big thing Uncle . We chose the Chinese product , because we didn't want to pay Made in USA prices .
@NoWr2Run7 ай бұрын
BEST COMMENT I'VE READ.
@gorkzop7 ай бұрын
And the thing is ..China CAN make quality products (they produce BMW engines,iPhone, Fc Moto are quite good) but those ain't cheap either anymore and cost nearby the same as well known brands
@rcnelson7 ай бұрын
Bullseye.
@petesmitt7 ай бұрын
@@gorkzop Those Chinese manufacturers are very carefully managed/controlled by the western companies; you can't compare an Apple Chinese manufacturer with non-western controlled factories.
@peachdaddy7 ай бұрын
We’ve made snap on disgustingly rich paying 20x or more on markup then they warranty your American tools with Chinese
Nothing but greed. The only function of a PE company is to put lipstick on it and sell it for a profit in 3-5 yrs
@peskypeet7 ай бұрын
They own more than that. Guess where most of it is manufactured..
@LongIslandMopars7 ай бұрын
It’s what happened to Chrysler after Daimler punted us to Cerberus. Cerberus further ruined Chrysler like Dr Z and his cronies at Daimler did before we got Fiat and now Stellantis. I miss Chrysler the Engineering Company.
@JG-kv4oi7 ай бұрын
Plus AFR too I think.
@CHRISCRAZZ-t7w7 ай бұрын
Chris from Canada, 1965 valiant signit, you know what a lot of people in the world have no idea what’s happening economically or with the gold standard our history, impressed with your knowledge
@bobross68027 ай бұрын
I'm a retired TV repairman, I remember seeing my first "made in China" portable TV - I was amazed that it worked it was so "rustic". The same with early Samsung and Goldtar
@piotr.leniec-lincow52096 ай бұрын
I remmember when on a TV news ( I think it was in late 70's ) they showed the last TV set build in America. I think it was RCA. No one was making a big deal out of it. I was shocked.
@SurnaturalM5 ай бұрын
I remember early Samsung, and it was "the crappy TV brand" of the 90s.
@dquad7 ай бұрын
American: I can't believe the crap that the Chinese make. Chinese: I can't believe the Americans are asking us to make stuff so crap.
@xybavh65757 ай бұрын
Correct
@kerrybarnes72896 ай бұрын
they also have incredible machines that we have CNC machines. there timber work is A class.
@sydrider60237 ай бұрын
Ask the US manufacturers, the product distributors if its time to bring back manufacturing to USA? I think its time the pendulum swings back. Enough of this low ball crap sold with huge margins while our manufacturing has fallen apart.
@WhiteTrashMotorsports7 ай бұрын
EPA regulations pretty much guarantee that no manufacturing will be back to our country.
@AtZero1387 ай бұрын
I truly believe in this.. Because of one reason... We would Pay.. we could support.. Endorse them.. Even pay more . Knowing we are buying parts made here for our Cars..
@eriestreetgarage7 ай бұрын
We don't have the slightest idea or 'drive' to make it happen on the scale China has. Took 40 years to get here will take 100 to get back.
@shadowopsairman15837 ай бұрын
@@eriestreetgaragethrow current us fed gov out
@sydrider60237 ай бұрын
@@shadowopsairman1583 you can blame the gouvernements if you want.
@nitromyke7 ай бұрын
That was a great follow-up of the '68 Pontiac that you did 2 years ago! Politicians hates us all... DeFeo 2028 !!
@nikolasb29337 ай бұрын
You're so right Uncle Tony. China is not ever the problem US government AND greeedy US corporations are ALWAYS the problem.
@jakobsimmons99977 ай бұрын
Uncle Tony for president 😂 who's with me?
@mikemalloy16816 ай бұрын
Not so much as president but head of the Dept of Labor. That is where he would do the most good.
@1STLAR21477 ай бұрын
NAFTA North America Free Trade Agreement. I stood on the Nogales border in 1993-94 protesting that shit to go through. This is what we have! Detroits big three is going to be a thing of the past shortly!
@timothykeith13677 ай бұрын
The auto industry is being sold for the utopian dream by globalists who have never had calluses or sweated. The EPA and CAFE regulations can't be matched by chemical realities. When I was young I heard this often : "If it seems too good to be true, then it is". The utopian dream will collapse and human suffering will ensue.
@jefferythomas44147 ай бұрын
What was it Perot said? A huge sucking sound of American jobs I think it was.
@alertgasper7 ай бұрын
@@jefferythomas4414 funny thing, folks blame clinton but forget Perot said it about Bush. NAFTA is an idea Reagan had and his VP Bush began as president. But hey, Nixon opened China up to us with Most Favored Nation Status. Both parties are out to screw us
@doesnothinspecial66807 ай бұрын
Agreed. I remember all the textile jobs my area lost. Uni party willingly killed this country.
@CaptainSeamus7 ай бұрын
A true "Race to the Basement" in terms of wages and quality. Perot and Dr Pat Choate (his financial advisor) described it very well. Hard for $20/hr labor to compete with $5/day labor...
@PaulSteinberg-il4tw7 ай бұрын
Man, I live in Canada and this place isn't much better than you just explained. Our industry has been deflated to an extent that it'll never come back, shit a lot of our food comes from somewhere else. It is shameful!
@thefreedomguyuk7 ай бұрын
Canuckistan is the leader in the fall of our Western world. You guys are NWO enablers, by allowing Turdeau to lead you into communism !! 😮
@Schlipperschlopper7 ай бұрын
Here in Germany we even have Chinese milk and cheese in the supermarket..its horrible
@peteloomis84567 ай бұрын
Truedue the commie is partially to blame for this who his mother slept with Castro from what I am hearing & he is a tyrant just like Castro was wanting to take everyone's guns away which there are a lot of Canadian people that live in very rural areas that need these guns they have & use to hunt for game to feed themselves and wouldn't be able to survive if that happens & it's the same for some rural areas in the USA where you don't have a local grocery store close by & people hunt during hunting season to keep food on the tables.
@russellwhite40867 ай бұрын
In Canada, too. Still have some of my fathers mechanic tools from the 50's and 60's. Lots of long forgotten brand names.All stamped "made in Canada", and all top quality. Surprising that once upon a time, that WAS Canada !!
@Yann3967 ай бұрын
@@SchlipperschlopperI’d rather eat my own sh1t
@marcgendron67457 ай бұрын
No party affiliations just straight up American ! 👉 🇺🇸
@franzputsch2547 ай бұрын
I used to think made in China was a disaster, too. The fact is though that without Chinese goods the inhabitants of the USA, including myself,would be impoverished without them. Made in Japan was the last big scare, too. The world moves on, Uncle.
@jasonbrindamour9037 ай бұрын
I started watching Louis Rossman because I wanted to learn electronics repair. What I learned before he started showing NYC and also leaving it due to the fact that he actually realized it was mind opening. Just watching his world around him die off. The amount of reasons we cannot get good parts is far deeper than you really know...which you know it already pretty damn deep. Our country used environmental bans to basically not allow anything to be manufactured in our country. And the funny part of all of the added costs to go along with USA laws in manufacturing makes it very expensive to meet those rules and have those monitored in inspected (which it should because it DOES cost people labor to do so). The rules in our country are so bad that I can't buy a pickup and back it up without it shutting down the drive, sorry different subject on the amount of sensors our government requires to drive the cost of a "basic" vehicle up. A "BASIC" work truck needs to now have so many monitoring systems that the vehicles are no longer affordable for the designers to hire the proper engineers (Tesla hired the highest paid and they still suck) and still make a profit. All of the new laws on how "EVERYTHING" is made bans all of it in our country. Let's just let China make it all with lead! I have no IDEA how any lawn service will make ONE dollar mowing a lawn with the electrical regulations that they cannot already handle!
@eleventwelves7 ай бұрын
everyone likes to blame China but you spoke the truth, we have been sold out to the lowest bidder and society now just wants to pay the lowest price. reminds me of this quote "It's unwise to pay too much, but it's worse to pay too little. When you pay too much, you lose a little money - that's all. When you pay too little, you sometimes lose everything, because the thing you bought was incapable of doing the thing it was bought to do."
@alertgasper7 ай бұрын
true, but i'll just add society doesn't always get to choose--our middle class is shrinking and sometimes all it can afford is the cheap product. after all, it's not just the auto parts industry, its home repair crap as well, at your local Home Despot or Lowedowns.
@eleventwelves7 ай бұрын
@@alertgasper yes i agree, it is expensive to be poor
@alertgasper7 ай бұрын
@@eleventwelves very true. and it takes money to save money--budget build car projects work when the builder owns a house to store stuff at, rather than rent a storage shed.
@k9er2337 ай бұрын
A more well explained version of "Buy once, cry once".
@natevanlandingham19457 ай бұрын
Well the guy called Broader and said he had a problem with the valve body it locked up in third. He asked where did he buy it. They guy said he bought it from Summit and Broader said we don't sell through Summit. The guy said your names on it and he said send me a picture of it and he got it and then recognized it wasn't his exactly. Then Broader bought one for himself.
@lasskinn4747 ай бұрын
he should've called a lawyer to get summit to pay. they'd settle. it doesn't need a patent or anything, just that they sold a product with his name on it makes it a counterfeit product. it's the resellers crime too, they can't hide behind their supplier on that.
@peteloomis84567 ай бұрын
I personally would buy a valve body or transmission from Cope racing transmissions & valve bodies because he & his son do all the machine work in house making billet aluminum valve bodies and heavy duty components for upgrades to many well known transmissions for older & newer cars trucks . Each & every valve body he makes gets a number engraved in them that's logged into his log books so if it comes back to be rebuilt or fixed he can look it up and it shows what exactly has been done to them . He also does this so he knows for sure it was one of them designed & made by him and not some crappy China knock off . He is mostly known for doing Chrysler 904 and 727 transmissions & valve bodies for drag racing but also does GM & fomoco as well & can build them from mild up grade to all our wild race transmissions.
@0utc4st19857 ай бұрын
Offshoring is such a disaster. Just look at AC Delco, once an OEM quality parts maker. Today, their parts are junk. I've had multiple AC Delco parts fail far too quickly. Bearings on water pumps, bad EGR valves are what come to mind at the moment, but I've seen enough to stay away from them.
@peteloomis84567 ай бұрын
Even the spark plugs they make now are junk with the threads all screwed up I noticed so I switched to the equivalent NGK that are made much better when you look at the both of them closely. Even champion is junk now compared to years ago and most of these Chrysler engines back in the day ran better using them but not anymore. I've bought new AC & champ plugs some years ago that had smashed electrodes and cracked ceramic bodies that shouldn't have passed quality control but did & got boxed up and sent out & had to take them back to swap them out for a plug that could be used . Our country has literally turned into a 3rd world country now thanks to our sell out politicians especially who we have running this country now Ol crooked Joe where at least when we had the guy before him we had more jobs coming back to America inflation was at a all time low food was way cheaper and those gas prices were fantastic and now look what we have !funding 2 wars everything is expensive as hell and this A hole could care less about the people that are actually the American citizens and of course our vets that are being treated with no respect and are living in the streets sick & can't find a place to live while he lets these illegals in that are getting free money housing and food which is disgusting because we are paying for it. I just lost a friend who died in a accident because of an illegal that shouldn't have been here who had 2 prior OWIs and was drunk driving that caused the accident because he was coming at him head on in the same lane and he died from the accident & he has 2 small children and a wife that this POS killed him and I blame Biden for this not closing the borders off & kicking his ass out . Biden will burn in a lake of fire for eternity for what he's done to our country and it's people along with the rest of them one day and it can't happen fast enough.
@wendwllhickey64267 ай бұрын
Cheap cost a lot more than you think,when you have to replace it constantly.😂
@artbrookey34687 ай бұрын
I agree. Let me ask you something How much were the Delco employees getting paid? Now compare that the Chinese labor...it's all about profit, almighty dollar
@bigkak7886 ай бұрын
Ah my water pump just went on my Chevy truck, bearings. You're dead on
@garyzsaludko14907 ай бұрын
Been in the automotive industry for 31 years. This is 100 percent accurate!! we are becoming the land of warehouses.... Not the land of manufacturing....so sad.....
@JBeebe7 ай бұрын
Made me stop and think....and remember. Back in mid-90', the owner (and founding father) of a commercial tire retreader I worked for passed away suddenly, and his 2 sons began an immediate fight for control of the company. The older son wanted to sell it, and the younger wanted to keep it going and actually cared about the employees. Couple of months later, early December I come to work go to punch in, and there's literally a pink peice of paper clipped to my time card (they were cardboard back then) Turns out the younger son lost the fight and we all had exactly 2 weeks and the whole plant would be shut down. Found out older son sold the corp to a Chinese co and they packed the whole thing up and moved it to Taiwan. I'm mid 20s, building a family (wife preg with my 1st born) and lost my income, my health insurance, etc..2 weeks b4 Christmas...rough year! Turns out, they could ship tire carcasses overseas, retread them, and ship em back cheaper than we could do it here in US! But, it didn't really mean anything to me then, other than corp treachery...it never connected the way Uncle T explained it. I for one have "remembered" and it's a great "Wake-up Call" to me...Thanks, Unc!
@MrHotshoe227 ай бұрын
You nailed it Tony! Take it from an unemployed machinist.
@LongIslandMopars7 ай бұрын
Damn. We need guys like you.
@Schlipperschlopper7 ай бұрын
@@LongIslandMopars In Germany they tell that there is "Fachkräftemangel" that means: “Skilled labor shortage” BUT they dont want to pay those skilled pleople, they try to give them "Mindestlohn" = "minimum wage" with those few bucks you cant afford any flat or car...so nobody wants to work in those jobs.
@LongIslandMopars7 ай бұрын
@@Schlipperschlopper It's the same here and the scales are way out of balance. It saddens me to see the manufacturing that left our island. Back in the day aerospace was a major employer with plants like Grumann, Fairchild, and Republic Aviation. They are all gone along with the theoretical engineering and applied technical acumen that built some of the world's most significant air and spacecraft (the lunar lander was built only a few miles away from me). It's terrible that we are no longer self-reliant as a nation.
@DwayneRouthierJr7 ай бұрын
I'm 33, I went to a vocational high school. Took up machining. My first job every other shop week was at a local Tool shop. I won't mention the name but if you are a machinist you've prolly used their tools... Drills, taps, side cutters, slot cutters... Etc. The company literally bought huge stock of drills and endmills from MSC and lazer etched their name on them in shop and sold them ad theirs. Made me sick then, makes me sick now.
@jaywon5557 ай бұрын
Having lived in China for 18 years and spending 4 of that doing QC/QA, what happens is a manufactuer is chosen, based on an agreed price with some requirements such as ISO certificates.ect,ect, they (the factory) then outsources the order to a factory that doesn't have any licence (no chinese business licence, no certifications) for way cheaper, then truck them into the ligitimate factory and ready for pre shipment inspection, usually someone at the good factory will go through the order place the 'good quality' cartons at the front of the pile and the inspector will do a half hearted job with factory staff positioned around him or her trying to distract them from inspecting. Try and follow the paper trail ? Sure, all paperwork is there, you can see the 'raw material' orders for that particular order, when asked to do a random inspection while production is still happening, you often get the excuse "Oh, next week", then by next week "Order done, come and have a look".
@Milkmans_Son7 ай бұрын
Putting the screws to the average Chinese 14 hours a day 6 days a week peasant won't solve that though, right?
@jaywon5557 ай бұрын
@@Milkmans_Son No, but Chinese businessmen are usually very cunning and everyone who's involved wants a cut of the pie which leads to these situations.
@LongIslandMopars7 ай бұрын
That sums it up.
@k9er2337 ай бұрын
@@jaywon555 Thanks for the eye-opening information about how things are done in the QC/QA end of this manufacturing environment. And under "everyone who's involved", would that include the shareholders who are realizing unprecedented returns on their investments in these companies? Legitimate question, and no I am not a shareholder in anything myself. I am a small, independent, self employed maker.
@alexdetrojan45347 ай бұрын
Very informative, thanks.
@fishgeralding92247 ай бұрын
I used to refurbish my own radiators, heat the tanks off, clean the vanes out with an old transmission dipstick I'd modified for that purpose. Then I'd sweat the tank's back on with silver sodder, pinch off any leaking vanes, and good to go. Radiator shops wanted $75, too expensive! The last one I did was in 2001 when I restored a 69 340 Dart for myself. My friends thought I was nuts, just buy a new Radiator they said. I rebuild and repair shit as a much as possible, when possible. I just did a repair on my 17 year old riding mower yesterday. I do these thing's for 2 reason's: to save money, but more important to me, as a matter of principle! I bought my last new vehicle in 1998 and sold it in 2019 with 397,000 + miles on it still going strong! I'll sum it up with this: We've lost our American pride, very sad! 😢
@CraigKing-bv7jx7 ай бұрын
1971 was a major loss, but the war started in 1912/1913 When we let the banks back in and started taxing our workers into wage serfdom.
@j.t.cooper29636 ай бұрын
I'm 60 and everything you said here is 100% fact. I remember everything you discussed here and I knew that we were going to be fucked and here we are.
@traderjoe1077 ай бұрын
Buying our land now.
@Yann3967 ай бұрын
I’d rather give my land to a fellow Canadian than sell it for millions to a Chinese.
@shawnbottom47697 ай бұрын
That's not nearly as widespread as some folks with an agenda would have you believe.
@llama92747 ай бұрын
@@shawnbottom4769 right just like them walking in from mexicao
@xq396 ай бұрын
the only thing we are not 100% dependent on for china is food, and now even they are taking our farm land.
@ulfskinn14586 ай бұрын
@@shawnbottom4769The fact that I happens at all is intolerable. No foreign entity should own a single inch of our soil.
@elizondorj7 ай бұрын
Kudos to you uncle for saying it like it is. I remember (old geezer here): Kruschev saying that the US would sell to the Soviets the rope needed to hang capitalism. He was wrong, it was sold to the Chinese. Thank you Nixon! 😖
@petesmitt7 ай бұрын
China uses the old Communist dogma; the long march through the institutions, which is a phrase is used to describe the intellectual takeover of a society without need to resort to a military conflict.
@lasskinn4747 ай бұрын
you know USA isn't the only country with the chinese quality problem. China has a huge quality problem with debts quality, with brand new housing being just money down the drain due to shenigans, bridges, food all have problems. the new chinese middle class has to contend with things like gas company changing the meters and tripling usage and the meter running even when you're not using any, the apartment they got mortgage for already not existing, wages being stuck at pre covid levels etc.
@obeseperson7 ай бұрын
It was bound to fail at some point, just didn’t expect like this
@therealR.D.7 ай бұрын
“I’m going to say something controversial” nah not really. You’ve got about 3 years on me. U.S. old guys get it. Great video.
@qoph19887 ай бұрын
None of this has ever been controversial, it's always been a popular and state-approved excuse for a phenomena that has plenty of other causes... Like people in charge who hate this country and its founding stock and want to destroy it for foreign interests, and have for decades
@johnandrews68727 ай бұрын
How did this happen? I was a sales and service VP and sat in the meetings in the 60s and early 70s where the board understood in the need for more profit and gave our products to china. We helped them build factories and taught them to make our products. it is the drive for more profit that those corps. sold out the US mfg. Even our own politicians, grew wealthy on these changes and let it happen.
@knirbnezner7 ай бұрын
I'm a business to business salesman, I have been selling for almost 30 years, I have seen the decimation first hand, Industry leading brands like Genie garage door openers and Hoover Vacuum cleaners, all purchased by wall street investment firms, all profits taken, all jobs sent to Mexico and then China. All so a few can become millionaires and the rest of us become poor. Your beloved Chrysler is a foreign company. I hate that GM and Ford can't make a reliable vehicle for my work car, I drive Hyundais now. My last American car was a 1988 LeBaron convertible, a literal death trap, head gaskets, computers transaxle all failed before 75,000 miles. I hope the tide will turn, but I don't hold out hope.
@MidnightOilsRestoration7 ай бұрын
That’s damn right! When America was a powerhouse we afforded to pay our fellow man for his superior product. Somewhere along the line we forgot who we were hurting. The high cost of a low price!
@alertgasper7 ай бұрын
we were a powerhouse because two world wars blew away the competition. by the time they got on their feet, we got hit with high oil prices to run everything on. then the middle class paycheck got hit with stagflation left over from Nixon taking us off the gold standard to pay for Vietnam, and the middle class consumer bought the cheap imported crap they could afford.
@obeseperson7 ай бұрын
If you can afford it go ahead, Money Bags, the rest of us can’t afford anything.
@alertgasper7 ай бұрын
@@obeseperson and that's part of the problem--we aren't considering the middle class is shrinking and can't afford union-made, american made products. For example, the average America moves 12 times in their life--that used to be more like 4 times. so if you buy a house and it needs a fridge, you buy what you can afford at Home Despot or Lowedown, not something that costs more but lasts the life of the house.
@barbmelle31367 ай бұрын
Too many salesmen and financial men in the middle sucking all the quality off one end and all the profit of the other.
@joew84407 ай бұрын
Japanese cars caught on because the quality was so much better than the US cars in the late 70’s on. I worked in service depts for both, seen it firsthand.
@ThirtytwoJ7 ай бұрын
Im lookin for a subaru brat or 3 to hold on to. Even if i have to upgrade the engine to a 90s version its still better quality and value than the new pos
@Milkmans_Son7 ай бұрын
And who'da thought they would be making them here some day? Not me.
@KevinKimmich440247 ай бұрын
they focused on quality and value. It seems really simple, but GM, Ford, Chrysler never came close to figuring it out. Still haven't and never will. It's bizarre. Japanese companies are quite good at making mechanical stuff and blades too. There's a grey market for Made in Japan tools like Milwaukee drills, etc... There's exceptions of course, some janky, sketchy Toyota and Honda years, some bad engines, but overall, on another level.
@patrickthomas87367 ай бұрын
My dad worked for GM in the 70's. He bought the best of GM, a 74' Vega and a 76' Chevette. He bought a 1977 Honda Accord. That car was so much better than the Chevette it wasn't even funny!!! The same price too!! The quality was better, the engineering was better, it had a 5 speed transmission and front wheel drive. The Japanese imports made Detroit honest.
@monikhushalpuri7 ай бұрын
@patrickthomas8736 I wouldn't even call the vega or the chevette the best of gm lol, those were bottom of the barrel cars...not saying Japanese cars are junk but the American stuff from the 70s for the most part can still be kept going today with routine maintenance and with modern oils the engines last a lot longer even when rebuilt back to the old school factory specs...I love Japanese cars but american mid size and full size cars from the 70s and 80s are easier to keep on the road especially with part availability
@williamstamper4427 ай бұрын
So far this is a great outcome to this story. As a 54 year old life long drag racer i didn't know the B name guy who makes apparently very good valve body products, but when his vid came up i watched it...and was no surprise about counterfeit parts. Been going on full force since the 1990s. Summit got caught...but at least they had a very positive response. People will be watching them like hawks for now on. Of course they knew all along but now they been caught they probably won't be playing that game at the levels they were. Im sure somebody in summit knew what was going on, but will go so far as to say i bet everybody didnt know. There has been many a counterfeit part sold in last 30+ years in the original correct mfg boxes duplicated almost exact. Nobody had the means to verify out of the box...you had to run the part to realize this part sucks! Turns out you had a counterfeit and practically nobody knew. The speedmaster thing was kind of outright obvious, but 8n any event this whole deal is getting attention and thats a start!
@edbeck89257 ай бұрын
Amazon and other online stores are basically a distribution center for fake products
@TexasRiverRat312547 ай бұрын
Hey Tony! All true and we have no one to blame but ourselves, the corporations and politicians.
@dandahermitseals55827 ай бұрын
In the late 60s I had a SnapOn tool franchise. They were the gold standard
@VWbusmarketcrash7 ай бұрын
Thank you Uncle Tony. I’m an older gen Z. Your little tidbits of economic history help me make sense of the world. I wasn’t there for the economic war we lost. I only live in the ruins.
@Dratchev2417 ай бұрын
even the gen-x and boomers have no idea it was already set it stone when they was being born, thanks to the fed reserve act 1913.
@4supertigers7 ай бұрын
You’re damn right Tony. I’ve been in the commercial landscape irrigation supply business for 33 years. When I got started 95% of everything I sold was US made. Now it’s less than 5%. It looks just like the US made stuff but the fit and finish isn’t what it was back in the day. It will take a full generation of Americans to rebuild what we once had.
@shakdidagalimal7 ай бұрын
Don't expect it. We have an amalgamation of foreigners who are not Americans, and Americans who are loyal to foreign nations, and that is probably 33% or more of the population at this point. Add in the woke equity affirmative action alphabet letters HR departments and the fear and cowardice and lack of backbone and doing what is right (because those above the corrections won't take them, due to ego arrogance and control freak issues), so don't expect American quality to even be able to be revived.
@TRON13137 ай бұрын
Holy crap!!! I have been trying to explain this to people for years. I am glad I am not the only one that’s apparently crazy or nuts.
@franklincormorant83127 ай бұрын
Brilliant and succinct. In this 25 minute dissertation by a guy with a ponytail sitting in front of a hotrod I've heard a fuller understanding of world politics and economics than most liberal arts educations can provide in 4 years.
@NonTypicalRacing7 ай бұрын
Summit and Jegs 👍🏻 THANK YOU ! Combined as competitors they've ousted Speedmaster. Let the class actions flow!
@shoominati237 ай бұрын
Also the thing that started all this offshore production was the Lima Agreement in 1975, when the UN Nations decided to aid economic growth in the Third World by transferring Manufacturing Industries to them. Which started rearing it's head in the late 90's and is entering it's endgame right now
@DeltaNineProductions7 ай бұрын
Spot on assessment, Tony. Been watching this slow moving train wreck my entire life, and I'm older than you. I'm surprised they've been able to keep the charade going for this long.
@RecklessEnterainment7 ай бұрын
Every part of this video is correct. The school system is broken too. It’s become such a business that high schools basically are just there to talk you into going to college. So many people my age aren’t going into trades at all and that’s also hurting this country pretty bad.
@hippie-io72257 ай бұрын
I have friends who are teachers. They are tortured by the inhuman "policies" being enforced.
@keithhodgkin33407 ай бұрын
Yep!! 100% glad you said it.
@inktownfishing45057 ай бұрын
Hey Tony you're spot on with this video. I'm a 40+ years back yard mechanic/jack of all trades and all I can say is if it weren't made in China...I would own hardly anything!
@MrTheHillfolk7 ай бұрын
11:30 watching this and knowing I'm sitting about 15mi away from one of the largest chip plants we had in the 90s, IBM East Fishkill NY. They used to employ about 30k people,now it's a ghost town. There's less than 3000.
@redlight39327 ай бұрын
our failure is by design
@LongIslandMopars7 ай бұрын
That’s terrible. So much goodness in New York State that has left.
@MrTheHillfolk7 ай бұрын
@@LongIslandMopars IBM used to make this place so fat and happy. In fact after the county fair was over, the week after they had another one but it was called the IBM fair. Employees could bring their guests. It was 90% the same but everything was free. Towards the end they did start charging like 25c for a burger though. The amount of waste was horrendous. They'd design and engineer a new building for some kind of manufacturing technique. Then during it The technology would change, so they scrapped it. Literally scrapped all the material and everything Say there was a scanning electron microscope slated for install? Straight in the dumpster. There was a "strict" policy about dumpster diving but yeah right ,everyone had stuff at home from IBM. My dad was saying, just using the numbers for an example, that say a mainframe computer cost 50 million from them. When the market started tanking for them ,they sold them at 10 million and still made horrendous profit. The gravy train was over by the mid /late 90s
@Jonsoar6 ай бұрын
I usually go to the cracker barrel in Fishkill when passing thru.
@MrTheHillfolk6 ай бұрын
@@Jonsoaryeah that's pretty good I've been in there occasionally. Haha actually last time was a little reunion with a few of pops coworkers. Further up on 9 in Wappingers near the Subaru dealer there's a kickass Chinese dumpling place. There's actually a lot of good restaurants up thru there if you can deal with the traffic. Ya know it's good when the sign reads "dumplings" and that's it😂
@rodduncan11837 ай бұрын
6 to 8 years ago the late Billy Mc Quin handed me 2 midget (speedway) shocks & asked me what the difference was between them Well I looked at both of them & also searched the packaging & could see not discernable difference, it had to be pointed out to me the very fine print. First MADE IN THE USA SECOND ASSEMBLED IN THE USA A whole toolroom was sacrificed all in search of a couple of extra $$$$$ also the loss of the years of technical development gone Kiwi Rod
@shamrockwoods29927 ай бұрын
Our government will just act like it didn't happen.
@toddjones51867 ай бұрын
Glad you're talking openly now Tony. You're a perceptive man. The only way to make America great again is obvious. Get behind the man. Peace!
@bbivens82637 ай бұрын
I remember when Nixon asked Timken Bearings to go build a precision bearing plant in China because they didn`t have the ability to make precision bearings. Anybody who knows anything about anything mechanical understands the importance of precision bearings in machinery, aircraft, autos, everything,... That gave China a great leap forward in technology right there.
@scotcoon11867 ай бұрын
I remember when harbor fright was mail order and the ad came in the newspaper.
@RobertBeck-pp2ru7 ай бұрын
Harbor FRIGHT is right. Buy it , bring it home, then fix it so it works half ass.
@russellbluewolf64277 ай бұрын
the WORST offender? Dorman..i refuse to put any Dorman parts on my cars..you KNOW its junk..
@michaellehmann28037 ай бұрын
Actually Dorman makes some pretty good stuff. Granted a lot of their stuff is cheap crap, but some of it is actually better than stock. A couple things that come to mind are transmission pans that are thicker metal than stock and have a drain plug already built in, and replacement chrome lug nuts that are solid metal instead of the factor ones with tin caps that swell up to where you can’t get the socket on them anymore.
@wolfcommander60097 ай бұрын
Unless u gotra pentastar 3.6 with the plastic oil filter housing..then u love Doorman...they also mke elbows for the 3800gen3 guys👍🏻😬
@Trump9857 ай бұрын
@@michaellehmann2803 Not been my experience with dorman. Sometimes you just don’t have a choice and dorman is the only option. I’ve never seen a dorman part that fit without modifications. I’ve never seen one that was anywhere near as thick as OEM. The last dorman oil pan I bought was so bad that every single hole was drilled out of place just enough that I had to weld up every hole and re drill them.
@michaellehmann28037 ай бұрын
Yes! I forgot about the 3800 coolant elbows, but I’ve actually done 3 of those pentastar oil filter housings in the last 6 months! Way better than the crappy plastic factory part!
@AtZero1387 ай бұрын
Dorman.. as I was told.. from the Rep.. uses a Database of Parts being taken off of Cars from u-pick, Pick-ur-part.. etc, etc.. If it's being taken off of junk cars. They will start making it.. No argument about it's quality.. They even make, Leaf Strings!!.. The Control Arm line .. actually uses a harder Bushing in its Ball joint etc .. as I laughed,, saying.. so you can actually get mild performance handling upgrade using them since there harder then OEM Spec!?.. hahaha.. His face.. like I just gave him a sales angle.. hahaha.. So yes.. if it's Dorman it's Crap .. Cheers from Orange County California 🇺🇸
@mostlymoparih56827 ай бұрын
No, no, no Unk. It is the fault of the consumer. I remember years ago a friend getting his radio stolen out of his car. He was so mad. He said he eas going to buy a hot radio from somebody because it was cheap. When I told him not to do that he asked me why. I said as long as thieves have a market they will continue to steal. Same rules apply to cheap parts. You give them a market and they will make cheap parts. There's an American company that makes products that goes into paint. They shut down a profitable plant in Delaware and opened one in China to save a few cents. Once the Americans stopped watching and supervising the process at the plant in China the product turned to crap. Boycott China.
@jasonrackawack93697 ай бұрын
Yesterday I tried to buy a US made GM or AC Delco waterpump ....they are 3x the cost of an aftermarket part......and both were made in china anyway. Should I give $240 to GM for a chinese part or Gates $80 for the exact same part in a plain box.....the castings and seals look identical. Its sad when you get excited to see made in mexico on something.
@lasskinn4747 ай бұрын
the thing is that the market existed for the american products. like your paint additive example, the consumer was buying the products it went into.
@alertgasper7 ай бұрын
but let's be fair. the middle class is shrinking, so it's not always a cynical pursuit to save a buck, it's a family that can't really afford the best. look at home products at Home Despot or Lowedown. same cheap crap problem, but americans now move 11.7 times in their life (used to be like 3 or something). so, why pay more for a toilet that lasts more than 10 years?
@mostlymoparih56827 ай бұрын
@@lasskinn474 That's Ashland who makes paint additives and they are in Parlin, NJ. Making a product at a lower cost is not a bad thing but I think they were trying to get away from union labor. In this case most consumers don't know who made their paint. if you are buying paint because you want a fresh coat on a house that you are selling then most consumers buy the cheapest stuff. If you are a painter and you know one paint goes on easier and looks better than you pay more for a that better product.
@Merylstreep19497 ай бұрын
Good point, UT, most people don't realize wars can be business oriented too
@mr202fan1217 ай бұрын
About 10 years younger than you and clearly remember going with my dad to one of those Harbor Freight tool setups at county fairground here in western PA, probably mid 80's he was a car guy and was amazed the stuff he could never get his hands on before right there in front of him. We took home a floor jack which finally quit working for me 4 years ago. And I promptly replaced with another Harbor Freight jack from a store front 10 miles away from me now.. And yes we lost this war years ago. Good stuff thanks
@aussiebloke6097 ай бұрын
What happened? That's not the Boomer chair! WHAT HAPPENED TO THE BOOMER CHAIR? 😁
@ericrombouts76987 ай бұрын
Just look at aftermarket camshafts and lifters. Made in China
@twinh537 ай бұрын
The Boomer chair was probably made in China and is now broken
@afoolandhismoneychannel7 ай бұрын
One word: Greed.
@qoph19887 ай бұрын
It's not greed. That only motivates the patsies. This is basically unconventional warfare, ever since MAD and nukes made the old-fashioned kind impossible if you want to do it directly between two armed countries. It's communist subversion. It sounds cliche because it's true and it's been true since 1945
@umakemerandy36697 ай бұрын
This is a HEAVY video, full of truth..
@Wheresthebeef1727 ай бұрын
I am from a union family and we always believed in buying American because we knew the source of our good wages was ultimately due to the strength of American manufacturing. Dad used to always say people who buy foreign products are cutting their own throats. The anti union types used to laugh when he said this, but here we are...............fun isnt it?
@door24167 ай бұрын
I retired from Stanley Black and Decker. They went totally Chinese back in about 2001. Our products took a major quality hit. I totally agree with you. I actually think it's too late to do anything about it.
@qoph19887 ай бұрын
There are plenty of ways, but they require political will.
@artbrookey34687 ай бұрын
Most Craftsman tools are made overseas now as well
@door24167 ай бұрын
@@artbrookey3468 Stanley bought Craftsman awhile back.
@henrylicious6 ай бұрын
We'll have to eventually. It's getting too expensive to police the world's shipping lanes.
@glenndickson76277 ай бұрын
I had this happen 20 yrs ago with ring, pinion and diffential gears for a heavy truck Rockwell rear axle. Similar issues with a big equipment name on pallet jacks that were counterfeit. Expensive problems.
@ericuncapher99227 ай бұрын
Yep. We're screwed!
@brianalbrecht44237 ай бұрын
to put it simply....!...we r..!...!
@Schlipperschlopper7 ай бұрын
said C3PO
@leonardhirtle36457 ай бұрын
Thank you Tony for speaking the truth. Corporate greed has gotten us to where we are today. Money IS the root of all evil ! P.S. thank you Mr. Nixon.
@ramblerdave13397 ай бұрын
The actual quote is, " the love of money, is the root of all evil ". Money is just money, can't do anything without help from humans.
@charlespratt86637 ай бұрын
It happens with aircraft parts as well. Let that sink in for a minute....
@GilBenavidez7 ай бұрын
Best video yet. Keep it real Tony. Send 'em back!
@72442conv7 ай бұрын
There is nothing illegal about copying a part as long as it is not patented or trademarked and the patent/trademark is still active. Copying of parts is nothing new, the USA manufacturers were doing it to other USA manufacturers since the beginning of the industrial era and well before that. The only reason this became an issue is because the part had the Broader trademark on it. If this part had been made without the Broader trademark on it no one would care and it would be a non issue. Summit and Jegs removed the product as protection from a possible trademark infringement lawsuit, nothing else. They are trying to indemnify themselves from a possible lawsuit by basically saying "we knew nothing of this and as soon as we did we destroyed the product and sent everything else from this manufacturer back to them and we no longer carry the brand". They are basically cleaning their hands like Pontius Pilate and putting all the blame on Speedmaster. They have also gotten a lot of positive publicity by "sticking it" to Speedmaster, which certainly helps them.
@MidnightOilsRestoration7 ай бұрын
That’s exactly right.
@sydneychase7807 ай бұрын
This is worth a 2 minute read.... Tony Tony Tony! You talked about this couple of years ago! Blackrock has bought up most of these companies and speed shops to sell crappie knock offs. Remember when the harbor freight trucks came around with their shifty knock off tools engine hoists that would kill you! I had a 383 on one of those engine stands it took a bow like a Chinese diplomat when the weight was put on it, a 383 not a catapillar diesel. Ding dong ping pong. They knocked off our Waterous pumps for your fire truck....they fail miserably, your car is one thing, if the fire fighting guys get there and 3000 gpm water pump dies....welll😮😅 yes fooked.
@ronjacobs56677 ай бұрын
UNCLE TONY for PRESIDENT!!. Thanks! This one of your best!
@Harold-si7eh6 ай бұрын
As a former truck driver I have been in many factory's in U.S. and have picked up Ocean containers and been in places where unboxed wiring harnesses underwent "Final Assembly" By installing a few wire plugs and the "Made in China,Mexico India,Etc." Sticker on the Box is covered with a bigger sticker that says "Assembled In U.S.A." This is Common Now and Even Encouraged by "Bean Counting Stock Holders" who do Not care even A little as Long as it Brings in the Money,,Even our Ketchup many times,but not always is in a American Made bottle with the content came From Argentina!!!!!!!!
@Mike-Olds-17 ай бұрын
I wish buying American made products was still a option. It just isn’t anymore
@MikeN-cs8qe7 ай бұрын
I saw Broaders video a few days back. I hoped you would cover this.👍
@malibuStroker7 ай бұрын
Absolutely right on every point.
@wasabitoburrion44097 ай бұрын
I remember years back when you could purchase Proto and Stanley tools at your local hardware and auto supplies. They were mostly made in the USA or Canada.
@Fishseaofcortez7 ай бұрын
When you talk about counterfeit parts, I always think OEM. When I was working at a Ford dealer, we started having comebacks on misfire repairs that we repaired with a COP. We service part warrantied a couple, but on the third one, we started asking questions. I pulled all coils from parts and stress tested them. Of the 47 coils I tested , only one of them passed. We looked at all the coils, and they all had the same production date ! We had some coils sent over from Motorcraft and noted they were in sealed bags with different production dates. It turns out the parts manager thought he had gotten a good deal on coils. Instead, he got counterfeits. We were lucky that the ones we warrantied, the claims didn't get kicked back.
@jefftschetter58817 ай бұрын
Much luv from Buffalo NY. , UTG rules
@JCVACCARO7 ай бұрын
Once again Uncle Tony is right again.
@charlesgall78297 ай бұрын
You are so right. My son and I were just talking about Iran and nuclear war on Israel. We both agreed it will never happen . All part of the game and we already lost WW3.
@mr.morelock7 ай бұрын
Iran was going to use Chinese parts, but went with North Korean parts to save money. Israel... is not afraid of those missiles making it to Israel. Iraq and Syria now... THEY should be worried that they won't make it to Israel...
@Milkmans_Son7 ай бұрын
Next time you have the discussion, one of you should throw out a theoretical like Putin having a terminal illness with 6 months to live and things on the ground in Ukraine taking a turn for the worse at some point before then.. If you both still agree it will never happen it's not a discussion, it's wishful thinking.
@Ziegfried827 ай бұрын
@@Milkmans_Son yep wishful thinking indeed. It would help if our own government and media didn't pump nonstop lies. When's the last time the US had an honest president, Jimmy Carter?
@dyer2cycle7 ай бұрын
@@Ziegfried82 Jimmy Carter only served one term..so,theoretically, couldn't he(like Trump), run for a second term again?...never mind that it's 45 years later...wouldn't that be something!...a 100 year old President in office!(oh, wait, don't we have that already now?)...
@DanielBODell5 ай бұрын
Check out any bearings manufactured in our country,their home offices may be here,but there made in other countries
@ronaldcolman62117 ай бұрын
Exactly right on all counts. Glad I'm not the only one.
@2HacksGarage7 ай бұрын
Well look at those wheels and tires on the rear of slaghammer!
@rchydrozz7517 ай бұрын
Its looking a little rednecky, time to tub it out.
@AtZero1387 ай бұрын
SLAGHAMMER ... When it was built . Is had never heard of.. Street Freak.. or this Style of build.. I'm also from the West Coast.. The name came from . I called the Slag... ARY.. added . SLAGHAMMER... Hahahaha.. .
@madman-ym7nw7 ай бұрын
That car is awesome
@teardroptrailers7 ай бұрын
I found myself staring at them like a young man stares at a woman's (insert body part of choice).
@damarapoledna36367 ай бұрын
In before Speedmaster changes their name and Summit continues to market them😶
@CrawldaBeast7 ай бұрын
I find a trend going on. Many KZbinrs are stepping out of their normal boxes to talk about stuff like this. Thank you I have seen my fair share of counterfeit products in the radio and gun parts market. Now I'm seeing it in many places. It's to the point where I have to look up how to identify the counterfeits.
@Dratchev2417 ай бұрын
electronics has it bad, so so many knock off parts. 2sc1972 not made anymore not been in a very long time yet still find *new* 1972s which every single one of them is junk.
@sonnymiller14867 ай бұрын
Tony, again you are 100% Correct with everything you had to say in this video. We Lost this War All By Ourselves. Unfortunately we as Gen X, were given the choice to buy the expensive stuff, that at the time we didn't know was expensive until the knock off stuff became available to us. I worked for Napa for 20 years. Napa owned 90% of what they sold. And of that 90% they had 100% of quality control. In the late 70's, early 80's all the discount auto parts stores started popping up. They were hard to compete against. But with our Great Customer Service and our Nation wide warranty i was able to compete. In the late 80's Napa started to try and compete with the discount auto parts stores by carrying a 2nd line of auto parts to be able to sell parts as cheap as the discount houses. I worked hard to build a reputation for the Napa brand. Unfortunately i saw the writing on the wall and fought as hard and as long as i could until i finally had to bail and go back to turning wrenches until 2000, when auto repair just got to be to expensive for me to even stay current. So i understand exactly what you are saying. Stay True, Brother!!❤
@stearlers0697 ай бұрын
W. Edwards Deming, Quality Control Management Kicked US manufacturing booty.
@bobbbababobo7 ай бұрын
💯 Agree. Preach it Uncle Tony! I would definitely vote for you with the platform you laid out. An excellent short socioeconomic history lecture.