U.S. Manufacturing Today
In this episode, Matt Horine points out that manufacturing was central to American independence and remains vital as the U.S. approaches its 250th anniversary. It traces how Britain’s mercantilist policies and acts like the Iron Act (1750) and Wool Act suppressed colonial manufacturing, leaving the Continental Army dangerously dependent on foreign supplies, including gunpowder and basic clothing at Valley Forge. It highlights Ben Franklin’s maker-centered economic philosophy, then explains how the founders enacted the Tariff Act of 1789 to support government, pay debts, and protect manufacturers. Alexander Hamilton’s 1791 Report on Manufactures framed industrial policy as national security and endorsed protective tariffs for “infant industries.” Henry Clay’s 1824 American System integrated tariffs, a national bank, and internal improvements, later advanced by Lincoln; the episode contrasts this history with post-1913 shifts toward income tax and lower tariffs and links offshoring and supply-chain vulnerabilities to renewed reindustrialization debates in 2026. Timestamps 00:00 America 250 Blueprint 01:17 Mercantilism and Suppression 01:57 Revolution Supply Crisis 03:15 Franklin Maker Ethos 05:02 Tariff Act 1789 05:43 Hamilton Infant Industry 07:50 Clay American System 10:10 Lincoln and Industrial Rise 10:44 Income Tax Tradeoff 11:45 Reindustrialization Lessons 12:39 Workforce Is the Engine 12:59 Closing and Resources Links [https://sustainment.com/]Navigating Trump 2.0 [https://www.veryableops.com/navigating-trump-2-0] Revitalizing US Manufacturing [https://www.veryableops.com] Sign Up on the Veryable Platform [https://company.veryableops.com/create-profile]
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