There were a variety of points that Pat Buchanan made in my latest reading of The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to the Gods of the Global Economy:
----Buchanan
 argues that Japan's economic miracle in the 1960's was due to its 
protectionist policies, as Japan allowed for domestic development by 
shielding it from foreign competition.  That may be so, but, the
 way Buchanan tells it, Japan still had some interaction with other 
countries prior to the economic miracle in the 1960's.  Japan imported 
from the U.S. "mineral fuels and animal and vegetable products", while 
also exporting a lot (page 31).  Could that have set the stage for the 
economic miracle, by providing Japan with wealth and capital?
----Buchanan
 believes that there was a negative aftermath to President John F. 
Kennedy's free-trade policies: a reduction in "America's share of world 
industrial exports", even as Europe's share was rising; trade deficits; 
and a decline in American industries, such as radio- and 
TV-manufacturing, antifriction-bearings, machine-tools, and American 
automobiles.  Buchanan narrates that a number of Republicans supported 
Kennedy's free-trade policies (except for some stalwarts, like Barry 
Goldwater), and yet there were many politicians who later wanted a quota
 system to offset their negative consequences.  But President Lyndon 
Johnson said no.
----In the same way that Edward Gresser in Freedom from Want
 sought to argue that free trade should be embraced by liberals because 
it's a liberal value, conservative Pat Buchanan seeks to demonstrate 
that protectionism is something that has been supported by prominent 
conservatives.  Buchanan acknowledges that President Ronald Reagan 
pursued free-trade policies----with the shoe industry, for 
example----and the result of that was a decline in the American shoe 
industry.  But Buchanan notes that Reagan was concerned about the impact
 of free trade on American workers prior to his conversion to free 
trade, and that Reagan as President pursued protectionist policies that 
protected Harley-Davidson and imposed quotas on the import of Japanese 
cars, resulting in a resurgence of the American automobile industry.
----Like Gresser, Buchanan looks at the trade policies of America's founding fathers.  Buchanan
 notes that America in her early days could have followed the free trade
 Gospel by sticking with what she was good at----growing tobacco and 
other products----while importing things that other countries were good 
at----products from manufacturing.  Instead, she built her own 
manufacturing base, one reason being that she wanted for 
America to be self-sufficient in terms of developing her own military 
supplies.  And she did not hesitate to use tariffs.  When 
British ships were "dumping goods in U.S. ports to kill the industries 
begun during the War of 1812...Madison imposed a protective tariff" 
(page 52).
----Buchanan argues that "free trade" policies
 in their current form are neither consistent with the free market, nor 
are they fair.  In the aftermath of Kennedy's policies, Europe and Japan
 had tariffs that inhibited U.S. exports from making the same gains that
 they themselves were making.  There are countries in which the 
government actually gives their businesses an advantage by subsidizing 
them, which is not a free market.  And there are countries that 
devalue their own currency, which results in a trade deficit by making 
our goods in their countries more expensive, even as their goods in our 
countries somehow become cheaper.  (But I don't know how their 
devaluation of their currency makes their goods cheaper in our 
countries.)
 
 
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