Someone left this comment, and I thought the response to it was too meaningful to end up five deep in a comments section, so I’ll do it here instead:
With all due respect, I don’t think I like your attitude. There most certainly is a place for the mom & pop establishments in America espscially coffee shops. While I will agree with you on this point ”
But people don’t give a shit about locality or being different, at least not enough people to matter. ” , you have to understand that there seldom are any alternative to the corporate establishments and people are too lazy to seek out independant alternatives so they ultimately take the path of least resistance. Corporate anything in America pretty much blows. If you can’t agree that indepedant business should be patronized over the corporations than I can only assume that you own stock in Starbucks or know someone who does….either that or you live outside of the U.S. Not only will I continue to seek out independant Family owned alternatives but I will also seek out the ‘Made In America’ label in everything I buy. Shame on you.
I really couldn’t care less about those things, and I find people who do small-minded. It reeks of patriotism, exceptionalism, and xenophobia. One of my all-time favorite quotes comes from George Bernard Shaw and sums this one up pretty nicely:
Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it.
Patriotism is merely a tool of the strong to control the weak. It’s been used, especially over the last two decades, primarily stifle genuine criticism and discredit opposing ideas. Conservatives especially use it to rail against any form of change. Don’t believe me? Ask yourself what the hell tea parties (which were originally about taxation without representation) could possibly have to do with health care. The answer is nothing, they’re merely a patriotic symbol meant to imply that the people on the other side, fellow countrymen who won the same free elections the tea party-goers voted in, are not. Not liking the guys in office and not being represented, to quote Jules Winfield, “Ain’t the same fucking ball park. It ain’t the same league. It ain’t even the same fucking sport.”
So patriotism is total bullshit. Which, by the way, is not the same as saying “I hate my country” as those who use it as a leash so love to imply. It’s just that I don’t consider Americans superior to the rest of the world. We’re no more worthy of life, liberty, and Toyota Camrys than anyone else. Sure, we have more of that stuff, and I’m thankful for it, but it’s just because we happened to be one of the small percentage of people lucky enough to have landed on the right spot on the map. The only difference between someone from Boston and someone from Botswana is luck.
(From an evolutionary psychology perspective, nationalism is an artifact of our tribal ancestry. It was of great benefit 10,000 years ago and its easy to see why the meme thrived, but as Africa, the Middle East, and other tribal regions show today it has long since outlived its usefulness.)
So when I buy a shirt, whether the job of making it went to an American or a Chinese person, someone got paid and I’m happy for that. I don’t think Americans, by virtue of having won the genetic lottery, are any more deserving of a factory job than people in any other nation. If anything, the third world needs it more. Recent recession aside, our manufacturing industry has been slipping away for decades and yet our GDP has been growing and unemployment has remained, even by first world standards, fairly low. Meanwhile most of India doesn’t have running water.
I certainly don’t hate small businesses either. I own two of them. They certainly have their place when they can compete against, and serve the customer better than, their larger rivals, as is sometimes the case in coffee. But the reason for their existence isn’t their size or the fact that they are locally-owned. It’s because some segment of the target audience has decided they’re better. It has to be that, because in the end that’s the only reason any significant number of people will choose them.
If you are a small business owner and you find yourself hoping people will patronize your business because they live near you or buy your product because it was “Made in America” then you’ve already failed. You might as well pack it up and go home because Starbucks or Wal-Mart or some exporter in Shanghai is going to steamroll you, and other than a few yuppie mommy bloggers lamenting your passing on their TypePad the world will never know the difference.
Similarly, if you want a job that pays well you should acquire a skill that is in high demand and low supply. You are a small business, and your labor and your knowledge are your product. And if all of your knowledge came from one week of training at the Ford plant then 6,000,000,000 people out there are selling the same thing for lower prices. You don’t deserve to be paid any better than the guy in China for doing the same job and no matter how much you tilt at that windmill, those $60k/yr + benefits jobs inserting tab A into slot B aren’t coming back.
And that’s the way it is and the way it should be because at the end of the day we’re all human. Whether American or Taiwanese, what determines how deserving of success we are isn’t where on the globe our moms happened to give birth to us, or how close the owner of our coffee stores live to the people buying the lattes, it’s how we well we all compete in the global economy. And that’s an idea that is as American as apple pie.