Taskiss wrote:
Blame mass production.
Yep.
Taskiss wrote:
IF I owned property and had huge wooded areas and IF I owned a mill and IF I cut my own lumber and IF I owned the space to let the wood cure....and IF all this was already paid for...
I could possibly turn a small profit on building furniture.
Local markets for raw materials have more or less disappeared. Lumber is so commonly needed that there are still local markets for it, but it is expensive. It trades hands many times before reaching the end consumer, is taxed at every step along the way, and is expensive to ship.
It's expensive to even live here, your house is expensive because it took a massive effort of hundreds of people to build it, like a Russian nesting doll of commerce. Not to mention, I've worked on several construction sites, and all of you may realize that you pay for mistakes during construction. What you mean not realize is how bad this is right now: I kid you not, a 13 story high rise apartment building I was doing HVAC installation for had 8 different blueprints floating around the job site, resulting in different teams with inconsistent floor plans. Our plans would show a place to run a ventilation duct, and plumbers, or electrical, or networking people would have already run their stuff there. Each team had a different blueprint, and every time they conflicted somebody had to tear down their completed work and start all over. When pouring concrete they dropped the entire 13th floor and injured 7 people. I spent 6 hours one day stuck on an elevator outside of the building 75 feet in the air because someone dropped a 2x4 from the 12th floor and it smashed the control box. Twice everyone except the electrical crew was sent home early because someone digging tore through a power line and knocked out all the power. I worked at this building for a total of 6 weeks.
These kinds of problems are not atypical for most construction sites. One customer returned a 1500$ air compressor a week after he bought it because it was "defective". Let me tell you what I found: the customer had failed to put oil in the compressor and ran it dry. Of course it over heated. This particular compressor has a safety shutoff system, and when it over heats it simply throws a breaker. Duct tape residue was surrounding said breaker and the compressor had thrown a rod. This brilliant man decided his compressor was turning off on him because it was defective, and then duct taped down the breaker to continue working. I WISH I could say this was not commonplace.
Nevandal wrote:
Therein lies the problem solved by people called "entrepreneur".
What we need is not entrepreneurs but skilled and educated workers. We don't need dozens of managers that can't communicate with each other we need people who know what they're doing.
Midgen wrote:
I build guitars, but I wouldn't dream of trying to do it for money, let alone try to make a living at it.
I consider it therapy for having to grind away at a job...
The state of affairs here is crushing the morale of the American workforce because it stands against and in the way of creativity and innovation. To the point that we actually pay to use our creative skills, rather than turn a profit at it.