- See all upcoming events
- Check out Hightower's past appearances and talks
- Find out how you can book Hightower!
Sign up for email alerts, from breaking news to weekly commentary:
Their names probably won't mean mean anything to you, but these people ought to have some modicum of personal recognition: Jason Anderson, Aaron Dale "Bubba" Burkeen, Donald Clark, Stephen Curtis, Gordon Jones, Roy Wyatt Kemp, Karl Kleppinger, Blair Manuel, Dewey Revette, Shane Roshto, and Adam Weise. These are the 11 workers who were killed when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded and sank into the Gulf of Mexico on April 20.
| www.flickr.com |
All Flickr photos of Jim Hightower
To add your photos, upload them Flickr and tag them with jimhightower!

It's time to make politics fun again! With uncommon insight, political fearlessness and laugh-out...
[More info]

"I make a lot of money these days speaking to corporations, so I'd really prefer not to admit how...
[More info]

With his aw-shucks charisma and no-nonsense attitude, he dishes out what's wrong with the eroding...
[More info]
Have a gander at the whole store here...
Home | Contact | MDC | RSS | Privacy Policy | Copyright Saddle-Burr Productions, Jim Hightower, All Rights Reserved 1996-2009
WHY SUPPORT CORPORATIONS THAT DON'T SUPPORT US?
Yes, our overall economy is a wreck – but you'll be glad to know that one business sector is booming: outsourcing American jobs to India.
It almost makes you burst with patriotic pride, doesn’t it? Even as unemployment nears 10 percent across our country, more and more U.S. corporations are literally cutting out on America's middle class, eliminating employees here as they shift their operations and jobs to low-wage workers 8,000 miles away.
Some in Washington talk about measures to keep good jobs in the USA, but greedheaded corporate executives lobby furiously to prevent any action. "Anything that stops the globalization activity," declares David Cote, CEO of Honeywell, "will be harmful."
Oh? To whom? Perhaps to him, but not to Honeywell's American workers, who're suffering from Honeywell's pell mell pursuit of globalization. Cote has been closing plants here and eliminating hundreds of jobs at the same time he is investing $50 million to build a new R&D center in India that will hire 3,000 people.
Likewise, Hewlett-Packard is offing some 15,000 American employees, even as it is establishing "HP Software Universities" in eight Indian cities to train thousands of new high-tech workers there. Why not invest in training Americans? Because those running these multibillion-dollar outfits feel no allegiance to America, thus they feel free to abandon our middle class – for nothing more noble than lining their own pockets by paying low wages to workers abroad.
Insurance giants, drug makers, corporate law firms, media conglomerates, and others are joining in the abandonment. They say "it's less costly" for them. Never mind what it cost their country.
If these profiteers have no loyalty to us, why be loyal to them? We should yank away all subsidies and every single benefit they get from America.
"India feels Less Vulnerable As Outsourcing Presses On," The New York Times, June 3, 2009.