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"Made in the USA"?

BigRedNole

Well-Known Member
OK, I am 100% for anything made in the USA and willing to pay a little more for it. However, I am not sure that this phone really is made in the USA or is it just partially assembled in the USA?

1. The US does not have the manufacturing infrastructure of Taiwan, China, and others.
2. The chips, boards, processors etc. are all made overseas

So, my question is whether this is a truly "Made in the USA" product or if pallets of pre-assembled parts come from China and someone in the US just sticks the colored back plate and buttons on it?
 
NM...

Reporters are using "made in the USA" in their interviews. Googarola clearly states that these are "Assembled in the USA". All this means is there are a bunch of people making minimum wage to snap colors on the phones that are made with nearly slave labor in China.
 
We don't know where the main chips are being made.

Samsung is producing this class of processor for their phones in Texas.

And I've been to the major semiconductor fabs.

A lot of these parts come from Taiwan - and the conditions are not slave labor at all.

I believe that there's a legal requirement for percentage of parts and assembly to qualify for the Made in the USA label.

And - we manufacturer a lot right here in the USA, our chip foundries are going very strong and growing.
 
so you are still finding a negative to bringing 2000 jobs back stateside and more to come in the future?

we have enough jobs in the USA that are NOT minimum wage,

Exactly, not everyone can work for Microsoft, Google, Boeing, Lockheed Martin or General Dynamics or whatever. :)

what this country NEEDS is THIS type of job to employee the homeless and those who are not qualified for higher pay grades. this is a FANTASTIC move for motorola and I am going to %100 support its price. its a GREAT device for the same price as other GREAT to good devices...

It's probably no worse than serving in McDonald's, I'm sure enough Americans already do that.

Even if it is a crappy minimum wage assembly job, they're still paying taxes and buying things in the US, and thus contributing to the US economy rather than China.
 
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