06-17-2019, 04:01 PM
Living in Finland and being at the lower end of the income scale I cannot understand why Americans are afraid of loosing cheap chineese imports.
There is so much secondhand stuff floating around in a modern consumerist society that I really don't buy much from China. All my stationary machines are either secondhand or home made. There are lots and lots of good pre-1980 machinery being sold off as industry modernizes.
Most of my hand tools are either secondhand or home made. Worn out files and beech offcuts scavenged from a stair factory makes good profile planes for instance.
What remains to be bought new is a few hand held power tools and some drill bits and saw blades and cutter knives and other more or less consumable items which anyway must be better quality than the substitutes that come from China.
Outside woodworking the basic principles are much the same.
At the moment me and my girlfriend are setting up our first home. A significant part of kitchen utensils are secondhand. All the furniture is secondhand except the home made bed. A significant portion comes from an assortment of diseased relatives whose stuff has been kept in store until someone in the family needs it. The clother hanger has belonged to and was made by my great-great grandfather. I got my aunt's dough mixer when she died and I have already rebuilt it. Several of her frying pans came from her grandmother who in turn had inherited them. Her linen cabinet came from her aunt's inlaws. Plenty of stuff comes from flea markets........ and some was even snatched out of dumpsters.
Buying chineese shoes is not financially sound. European shoes are several times more expensive but I have very wide feet (said to be more common in the Nordic countries than elsewhere) and the only way of maintaining healthy feet (which is an important asset for earning money) is to have ergonomic shoes. European shoes last much longer than their Chineese counterparts so the cost per walked kilometre is hardly higher than for chineese shoes.
What remains is clothes and other textiles. There is no affordable alternative to far east import but as I tend to use my clothes until they are too worn to patch anymore I really don't buy much clothes.
I have never owned a new mobile phone. Old mobele phones are almost free. However I buy chineese replacement batteries for my outdated phines. Currently a Nokia 3510.
My car is 35 years old and I have had it for 19 years. Rising prices on new cars would not make too much of a difference.
However I am forced to buy chineese parts for my car as those bastards at General Motors have quit making and supplying parts.
My tractor is 48 years old. There is no reason to buy one of those ATVs or compact tractors to maintain our woodland. Old tractors are much cheaper and fairly plentiful. However a significant portion of the spare parts nowadays come from China and not from Coventry.
The log trailer is well over 50 years old and the loader is 33 or 34 years. All of it perfectly functional.
For those whose incomes don't suffice for this secondhand based lifestyle I think the best way to do is to start national labour unions and run nationwide strikes demanding increased wages so you can buy the little new stuff you need either from US manufacturers or from Chineese manufacturers who pay the tariffs....... and start a political party demanding better coverage for those who are too old or too unhealthy to work.
There is so much secondhand stuff floating around in a modern consumerist society that I really don't buy much from China. All my stationary machines are either secondhand or home made. There are lots and lots of good pre-1980 machinery being sold off as industry modernizes.
Most of my hand tools are either secondhand or home made. Worn out files and beech offcuts scavenged from a stair factory makes good profile planes for instance.
What remains to be bought new is a few hand held power tools and some drill bits and saw blades and cutter knives and other more or less consumable items which anyway must be better quality than the substitutes that come from China.
Outside woodworking the basic principles are much the same.
At the moment me and my girlfriend are setting up our first home. A significant part of kitchen utensils are secondhand. All the furniture is secondhand except the home made bed. A significant portion comes from an assortment of diseased relatives whose stuff has been kept in store until someone in the family needs it. The clother hanger has belonged to and was made by my great-great grandfather. I got my aunt's dough mixer when she died and I have already rebuilt it. Several of her frying pans came from her grandmother who in turn had inherited them. Her linen cabinet came from her aunt's inlaws. Plenty of stuff comes from flea markets........ and some was even snatched out of dumpsters.
Buying chineese shoes is not financially sound. European shoes are several times more expensive but I have very wide feet (said to be more common in the Nordic countries than elsewhere) and the only way of maintaining healthy feet (which is an important asset for earning money) is to have ergonomic shoes. European shoes last much longer than their Chineese counterparts so the cost per walked kilometre is hardly higher than for chineese shoes.
What remains is clothes and other textiles. There is no affordable alternative to far east import but as I tend to use my clothes until they are too worn to patch anymore I really don't buy much clothes.
I have never owned a new mobile phone. Old mobele phones are almost free. However I buy chineese replacement batteries for my outdated phines. Currently a Nokia 3510.
My car is 35 years old and I have had it for 19 years. Rising prices on new cars would not make too much of a difference.
However I am forced to buy chineese parts for my car as those bastards at General Motors have quit making and supplying parts.
My tractor is 48 years old. There is no reason to buy one of those ATVs or compact tractors to maintain our woodland. Old tractors are much cheaper and fairly plentiful. However a significant portion of the spare parts nowadays come from China and not from Coventry.
The log trailer is well over 50 years old and the loader is 33 or 34 years. All of it perfectly functional.
For those whose incomes don't suffice for this secondhand based lifestyle I think the best way to do is to start national labour unions and run nationwide strikes demanding increased wages so you can buy the little new stuff you need either from US manufacturers or from Chineese manufacturers who pay the tariffs....... and start a political party demanding better coverage for those who are too old or too unhealthy to work.
Part timer living on the western coast of Finland. Not a native speaker of English