autogyro wrote:Money manipulation I will not say the actual words.
In any case Americans have tried in the past.
They should place more interest in getting rid of some of their military aircraft which are all simply money mines designed to steal from the tax payer and far from capable in comparison with other countries types.
America lost its source of technical innovation some three decades ago when the sources from England dried up.
It is the same with motor sport.
come on, what the hell does a crappy new f1 startup have to do with any of that political BS?
ACJJ619 wrote:It does seem to be the American way to base everything in the USA. I've only been three times but "Built in USA" does seem to be the biggest selling point out there. I saw TV's where BUILT IN THE USA was far further up the priority list than the size or whether or not it was HD, which were listed in small print on the side.
I think Haas needs to swallow up his pride and accept that the "European just-throw-money-at-things-and-go-racing approach" has worked quite well for the past 50 years.
I'm not at all defending Haas' remarks when I say this, but "Made in USA" is a big selling point here for a couple of reasons, depending on the particular market. USA has been suffering from a LOT of jobs (especially manufacturing) being outsourced for decades, so it's usually meant to convey that if you buy a "made in USA" product, you are supporting the domestic economy, and/or NOT supporting sweat shop operations in 3rd world countries. There is also the perception that the build will be higher quality but that's probably a less concrete claim to make.
At any rate, none of this has anything to do with Haas sounding like a d-bag in his press conference. As an American,I would appreciate if people in this thread keep in mind that he does NOT speak for America, nor does this have anything to do with any "American way". He wants to base his operations in the US because he already has the infrastructure built here.