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Tags: commerce, debate, knife-companies, patriotism, tariffs
Those look good and they are Canadian? Grohmann? Never seen them before,I only know Grohmann for the buses they build. I also always thought of them as being from Europe,my bad!
Chris Hillier said:I have to agree, buy Canadian :) Grohmann makes some fine knives and are only just up the road. Seriously though. Buy what fits the need, no matter where it comes from. Unfortunately all those manufacturing jobs that have been lost overseas, even the ones being done for North American companies, will never be back on North American soil because none of us can afford the 87.7% pay cut to bring them back.
OH NO ..............
MY MOST RECENT KNIFE PURCHASE WAS FROM NEW ZELAND.....
now how did that slip thru???
I guess if you live in an area with lots of "patriots", it might matter. If you live in an area where Honda's and Toyota's are as rare as Ferrari's, then it might be better for your health to buy only American knives. But unless someone gets up close and personal with your Buck, how would they even know where it's made?
"Buy American" is a government created campaign to save a few jobs, but it's a band-aid approach to a much larger problem. And it actually hurts the very suppliers of America's raw materials.
Even brands that claim to be American, like Delta, Fender*, Apple, and even some Bucks are made in asia or Mexico, and (maybe) assembled/packaged here. By demanding cheaper products, Americans have collectively decided that it is OK to make China rich. It's time to start looking at the world as one big economy, not just America at the top with a bunch of second class economies below it. That's just not reality. Share the wealth and soon everybody will benefit.
As for being "un-american"... look around your American made car (or is it Canadian-made?), and your entertainment center (mostly Japanese I'll bet), and your computer (Chinese or Asian motherboards, Chinese or Mexican hard drives) and the entire contents of your house (Hmmm... deodorant- made in France) , and then do the same in your patriot neighbors house... I'll bet you'll discover that you've both been un-american so many times, and for so many years, that a new made-in-xxx knife won't seem like such a big deal.... Oh, sorry, this point has been made a few times already....
I have a growing knife collection, but I have to really save up to buy a locally made knife. It might be time you custom knife makers mechanize, or set up a chinese shop ; )
*ok, a few Fender guitars might be 80% American...
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