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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6-page paper provides an analysis about a segment on CNN's Moneyline on the export of U.S. jobs. The paper analyzes this particular program, discusses literature pertaining to the topic, then determines if the program was biased. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTCNNmon.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
treaties - were ratified by other nations, that jobs would leave the United States as multinational corporations found cheaper places to produce goods. This fear was mainly brought forth by
U.S. labor unions and isolationists such as Pat Buchanan and Ross Perot. On May 26, 2003, approximately 10 years after NAFTA was
ratified, Lou Dobbs Moneyline, a weekly program on CNN, aired a show detailing exactly what was happening to American jobs as globalized trade had become a reality.
Given the show was on a holiday weekend (Memorial Day weekend), Mr. Dobbs was absent from the desk. Instead, Jan Hopkins anchored the program.
The name of the show, "Exporting America," explored the idea that free trade was to help create new jobs and markets for workers
in the U.S. - but that the reality of the situation was actually quite different. In addition to shipping American dollars around the world, the anchor noted, the jobs are
going around the world as well. Jobs - as well as technology and intellectual capital - are being sent overseas. The reporter
on the story was Peter Viles, who began his segment with the assertion that the American economy was losing jobs - and many times, we know where theyre going. Although
the initial promise of globalization was to create new jobs and markets, the reality is that the globalization has actually led to a trade deficit, impacting five percent of the
GDP while, according to author Arthur Tonelson, is a race to the bottom because of costs. According to Tonelson (who authored a book by the same name), while trades were
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