I got a kick out of Obama’s announcement that The United States is going to double it’s exports, which Obama proclaims like pulling a rabbit out the hat. I am sure this is going to be a piece of cake, what with all the taxes Obama is creating or hopes to create for doing business in this country. Not to worry- we have Obama at the helm with his profound academic experience to guide us, but I might feel a smidgeon more confident if Obama would at least make his academic records available to the public since academics is the primary foundation of his expertise.
Oh well, I know that Andersen stoneware is an exportable product but I am not holding my breath for assistance from either the federal government or the Maine State House of Lords- oops, I’m sorry, I meant to say, the Maine State “creative economy”. I have written to our state government on several occasions to inquire if they have information that would help us in this matter but they simply ignore my correspondences. I guess we flunked the “creativity” standards put out by the House of Lords- oops, sorry again, I forgot-the official name is “the creative economy”!
I have been watching our web statistics for a while and have noticed that the countries that visit our site on a regular basis include The Russian federation, Czech Republic, Poland, and China. I wonder what to make of that.
At the rate our administration is going, American made products will have to be exported as upper end items. I think this can be done, a point gleaned from Philip K Dick's novel, The Man in the High Castle. This is a novel about an alternate reality in which the Germans and Japanese won the second world war. The Germans had the East Coast of the United States, The Japanese had the West Coast of the United Staes, and the "fly-over zone", in between, seemed to continue to exist as America.
In this novel collecting "Americana" was all the rage for the japanese. This, to me , symbolozed, that after the demise of the American experiement, it will be longed for and valued. I think there is something to be said for the marketability of products that are representative of American individuality, which differs from other more identifiable cultural arts, suh as tradition American Indian, South American, African, and other cultures.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
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