Made in USA


I love to support USA products as much as I can. Even if it costs more. Id say 2nd choice Europe or Japan. Last place China.

So USA made HiFi products I have are... Magnepan, Odyssey, Geshelli, Rythmik, Schitt, Bluejean, Belden, Analog Productions( vinyl). Musichall & Monitor Audio (UK), Nagaoka, Magomi(Japan), 

Other USA made HiFi I know of.. Kilpsch (high end speakers), Jeff Rowland, P.S. Audio, Emotiva?

Im sure there are more. Please continue list and lets support our own.

bikefi10

A People's History of the United States (2015, first edition 1980) walks you through the United States' past from the perspective of the marginalized, the disenfranchised and the oppressed. These blinks describe a history of uprisings, protests and activism in the face of a government built for the rich.

The Zinn Education Project approach to history starts with the premise that the lives of ordinary people matter — that history ought to focus on those who too often receive only token attention (workers, women, people of color), and also on how people's actions, individually and collectively, shaped our society.

Zinn's point, however, is that “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” can be forms of control. Put another way, he's arguing that the Founding Fathers pacified their people by giving them just enough freedom and power not to rebel, while still preserving an unjust status quo.

I studied History & Political Science in the early 70s at UCLA (double major).  I had an excellent professor on dialecticism of Hegel, Marx and Freud (Wolfenstein, a protege of Angela Davis).  Unlike today, I was treated with respect by the professor and deemed a bourgeois liberal Jew (I'm rather Conservative and religious).  

My comment is that Zinn's attitude is antithetical to my view of history and the United States/consitution/bill of rights.  Zinn's good points concern the ordinary people to compose society and their lifestyles/effect on it and history.  However, he obliterates the positive characteristics which underline the society, which guide it, which nuture it or destroy it.  Overall, United States has a progressive and overwhelmingly positive experience for Americans and the world.  Just because of it's many faults and failings does not mean it should be condemned as he does the founding fathers.  

While one can learn much concerning our history, his attitude is a negative one and should be discarded.  The benefit of learning of the potential for governmental and elitist misconduct is to rectify it.  All the negative conditions which suppressed and hurt American society of the centuries are learning points for today.  While our current society is imperfect, the progressive/socialist/communist movements of today can only destroy and not elevate.  Despite the potential and actual problems presented by free markets and capitalism, it is a superior system to that which Zinn professes to displace it.  

One of my specialties was bureaucracy in  government.  This is the most difficult area to reform as it is entrenched and stubbornly persists in nearly all societies.  

 

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Trained historian and former high school teacher here…not sure why this thread has veered into this territory but I assigned Zinn to my AP US History students to provide a counter narrative to the assigned text (Blum). In today’s parlance Zinn would be considered a CSCT (Critical Social Class Theorist). He views the progression of American history through the lens of social class conflict with a particular emphasis on the struggle of those on the margins. While I viewed it an essential perspective, I did point out to my students that Zinn is an abysmal historian. In developing his arguments he ignores contrary evidence and often relies on a handful of sources which he selectively quotes. So for my students the text served as both alternate perspective and a lesson in how not to research and write in the field.

If it's not already been said; I'd say your mostly right on the made in America as far as final assembly in some if not most all cases. Products can claim made in America even if only the final assembly and/or testing is done here. The only way to really tell is to look at the board level assemblies which will sometimes display country of origin, but even then some do not, even it they have be produced outside the US. "Counterfeit" parts abound across all platforms of industry, especially in discrete components like capacitors, diodes and chips, for example, and even in hardware such as screws and fastening components. "American Made" does not always mean "all" American made.

My system is:

Conrad Johnson Power, Pre, Phono Pre, and CD player 

Sota Turntable

Vandersteen Speakers

All made in USA, all sounding great!