• Import problems was meta: countries in the sea of time

    From pyotr filipivich@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 19 13:09:24 2020
    XPost: alt.time-travel

    Ed Stasiak <estasiak@att.net> on Wed, 22 May 2013 19:15:56 -0700 (PDT)
    typed in alt.time-travel the following:
    Rich Rostrom
    Ed Stasiak

    Availability would drop and costs would increase...

    You don't get it. Availability of these
    things drops _instantly_ to _zero_.

    Yabut, _what_ things?

    The U.S. imports plastic sporks from China and that will
    be gone in this scenario. Now the U.S. could ramp up
    domestic spork production but I suspect that due to the
    strange situation and the need for plastics for higher
    priority areas of the economy, we wouldn't bother.

    Initially, kids would have to bring their own forks to school
    for lunch and down the line, school cafeterias would provide
    silverware as they did back in oldy timey days.

    You have to define what "hurt' means in this context and
    I just don't see this being that much of a problem for the
    average Joe American Citizen.

    The inserts for machine tools are imported. How long to ramp up production of those so that you can start making the machined parts to
    replace the imports?

    Various annoyances, sure (gas prices spike, tomatoes
    might not be available in northern states during winter,
    etc) but nothing we couldn't easily deal with.

    Did we mention that the subways stop running, because the plates
    used to attach rails to ties were imported, and there isn't a domestic
    source?

    --
    pyotr filipivich
    Next month's Panel: Graft - Boon or blessing?

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