AmericanMadeHeroes.com
We honor America's best manufacturers keeping America's future strong!
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Authors, Michael Lind and Joshua Freedman |
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Policy Director of New America’s Economic Growth Program.
He is a co-founder of the New America Foundation, along with Ted Halstead and Sherle Schwenninger, and was the first
New America fellow.
For assembling some of America's greatest thinkers to review & discuss the future economic growth opportunities for America,
including manufacturing, and for then modorating group discussions & individual interviews as presented below, Mr. Lind has
earned special recognition as an
American Made Hero.
AmericanMadeHeroes.com
AmericanMadeHeroes.com
Mr. Lind has examined and defended the tradition of American democratic nationalism associated with Alexander Hamilton in a series of books, including The Next American Nation (1995), Hamilton’s Republic (1997), and What Lincoln Believed (2004). Lind has also written two books on U.S. foreign policy, The American Way of Strategy (2006) and Vietnam (1999). A former neoconservative, Lind criticized the American Right in Up From Conservatism: Why the Right is Wrong for America (1996) and Made in Texas: George W. Bush and the Southern Takeover of American Politics (2004).
We welcome Michael Lind as a respected member of
AmericanMadeHeroes.com
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Alexander Hamilton |
"Not only the wealth, but the independence and security of a country, appear
to be materially connected with the prosperity of manufacturers. Every nation ... ought to endeavor to possess within
itself all the essentials of a national supply. They comprise the means of subsistence, habitation, clothing and
defense ... The expediency of encouraging manufactures in the United States, which was not long since deemed very
questionable, appears at this time to be pretty generally admitted."
-- Alexander Hamilton ... an American Made Hero! |
| American Made Hero! |
"It is widely agreed by economist such as Martin Wolf on the right to Paul Keugman on the left that we are not
simply facing a financial crisis that can be patched up by a new regulatory system. Indeed, we are facing a crisis that
has its' roots in the distribution of production within the global economy where you have built up enromous overcapacity
in trade surplus countries such as China, Japan and Germany which has been enabled, for several decades, by debt driven
consumption in the United States."
-- Michael Lind, New America Foundation
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