Why aren't we producing more of these in the US? in asia they're using menial labor to make these...

why aren't we producing more of these in the US? in asia they're using menial labor to make these. in the US we can automate it with machines and be 1000x more productive.

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>in the US we can automate it with machines and be 1000x more productive.
sure you could

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Then do it and become rich

You don't even know how they are made.
Take your meds.

Idk about traditional trips, but we could definitely innovate new CPU architecture with moderate funding.
But you knew, it's more important to give $Trillions to Pharma for (((vaccines))).
So, here we are.

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We really should be producing them in our backyard

someone answer me please: what is the tech behind this thing that only taiwan produces? this thing looks so easy to manufacture that i cant believe it is only mass produced there

>someone answer me please: what is the tech behind this thing that only taiwan produces? this thing looks so easy to manufacture that i cant believe it is only mass produced there
ASML(a Dutch company) makes the machines.

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it's extremely easy to manufacture.

they have an advantage because they're allowed to use child labor

what?

Menial labor? Chip manufacture is extremely specialized.

basically this, 7nm is pretty trivial for a slim 8 year old taiwanese economic slaves fingers to put together compared to an obese midwesterner

It's incredibly difficult to make these chips and costs a ton of money. Only two companies can make leading edge chips, TSMC and Samsung. Intel might be able to catch up in a few years and they are planning it and expanding in US and Europe. Labor still plays a role though because you still have to build the lab and install the tools. I don't really see a competitive advantage Intel would have since they lost the tech advantage.

Because in China they train ignorant uneducated children of farmers to load shit into a machine for minimum wage.

In the US they will require a masters in engineering and 2 years experience before allowing you to put on the bunny suit and then only pay $22/hr and expect you to work mandatory over time.

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There are many others:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_semiconductor_fabrication_plants

Any plan with listed with about 8 to 22 (or more) is capable of it.

we do

>menial labor

No they're not.

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>why aren't we producing more of these in the US?

Because in the US workers have rights and pollution controls
youtube.com/watch?v=Rkgx1C_S6ls

Do you think little gooks create these by hand?
Once the program is up and running you only need a few monkey ''machinists'' to look over the machines.

Free international trade is wrong, as long as it will exist you will compete with markets that are incompatible with yours. Enjoy your quick profits Boomer Mckike

Semiconductor companies haven't bribed Congress enough to get tax breaks.
They're also not going to bribe Congress because the US needs them more than they need the US.

You also need the raw materials, 100% of which are dug up and smelted in China.

Try 16$ in Canada
I do more as a janitor
I hate the merrylards who encourage people to become machinists on this board
It really depends where you live

You'd have to buy the parts to make the machines to automate the process from asia.

they probably fund it out of country so they can sneak in illegal backdoors

I use to work for Texas Instruments.
Making semi-conductors isn't easy.
The manufacturing process is a lot more difficult than other industries and that's if you are making older type chips (analog). The newer fabs are waaay more expensive. Not to mention you need SMART people working in the fabs. I was working in a older fab that wasn't automated like the newer ones and we had to deal with some many dumbass temps due to the "labor shortage".

So glad I work for a major bank now.

ASML makes a certain type of machine that is used in the newer/better chips. Mostly the ones that go into your computer (CPU and GPUs).

Not if your company uses a bunch of dumb poors