POLL QUESTION

New Balance struggles as last remaining major U.S. athletic shoemaker

Robin MacFarland sews the upper of a New Balance 574 in Norridgewock. Despite the benefits of free trade, it can also destroy some U.S. jobs, and those losses are felt more acutely in a time of high unemployment.
Joel Page | The Washington Post
Robin MacFarland sews the upper of a New Balance 574 in Norridgewock. Despite the benefits of free trade, it can also destroy some U.S. jobs, and those losses are felt more acutely in a time of high unemployment.
Posted July 29, 2011, at 4:59 p.m.
Last modified July 29, 2011, at 9:32 p.m.
Print this   E-mail this    Facebook this   Tweet this     

Poll Question

A worker uses a press to attach a shoe upper to the outsole at the New Balance factory in Norridgewock. The Obama administration is negotiating a free-trade agreement with Vietnam and seven other countries, and it is unclear whether the New Balance plant can stand up to a flood of shoes from that country, already one of the leading exporters of footwear to the United States.
Joel Page | The Washington Post
A worker uses a press to attach a shoe upper to the outsole at the New Balance factory in Norridgewock. The Obama administration is negotiating a free-trade agreement with Vietnam and seven other countries, and it is unclear whether the New Balance plant can stand up to a flood of shoes from that country, already one of the leading exporters of footwear to the United States.
Kirby Knox inspects a 993 shoe at the New Balance shoe factory in Norridgewock. The company could make far more money if, like Nike and Adidas, it shifted most of these jobs to low-wage countries.
Joel Page | The Washington Post
Kirby Knox inspects a 993 shoe at the New Balance shoe factory in Norridgewock. The company could make far more money if, like Nike and Adidas, it shifted most of these jobs to low-wage countries.
Washington Post graphic

NORRIDGEWOCK, Maine — At the factory here owned by New Balance, the last major athletic shoe brand to manufacture footwear in the United States, even workers on the shop floor recognize that in purely economic terms, the operation doesn’t make sense.

The company could make far more money if, like Nike and Adidas, it shifted virtually all of these jobs to low-wage countries.

So employees try each shift to make it up. Conversations on the shop floor are sparse at best, and the tasks at each work station have been stripped of waste and precisely timed. Workers cut leather for a pair of shoes in 88 seconds, handle precise stitching in 37 seconds, and glue soles to uppers even faster.

“The company already could make more money by going overseas and they know it,” said Scott Boulette, 35, a burly team leader who has his son’s name tattooed in Gothic letters down his left forearm. “So we hustle.”

Now, however, comes what may be an insurmountable challenge. The Obama administration is negotiating a free-trade agreement with Vietnam and seven other countries, and it is unclear whether the plant can stand up to a flood of shoes from that country, already one of the leading exporters of footwear to the United States.

“We are deeply concerned by the inclusion of Vietnam in a potential free-trade agreement,” said Rob DeMartini, president and chief executive of New Balance.

The workers’ predicament highlights the difficulty facing the Obama administration as it seeks free-trade agreements as a potential remedy for U.S. unemployment, now at 9.2 percent.

Backed by many economists, the administration says the agreement with Vietnam and the other countries, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, would create U.S. jobs by opening up Asian countries to U.S. exports such as computers from California and paper products from Maine.

“This agreement will create a potential platform for economic integration across the Asia-Pacific region, a means to advance U.S. economic interests with the fastest-growing economies in the world,” U.S. Trade Representative Ronald Kirk told Congress in announcing that negotiations were about to begin.

Moreover, importing shoes from Vietnam at lower costs would benefit some in the United States, either by reducing prices for consumers or raising profits for manufacturers that have their operations overseas.

But the example of New Balance, which has long resisted the exodus of American footwear manufacturers, highlights the fact that despite the benefits of free trade, it can also destroy some U.S. jobs, and those losses are felt more acutely in a time of high unemployment.

“We want to fight really hard to keep this business in Maine,” said Lori Cook, 28, a single mom with two kids. “I’d like to keep my job.”

The company’s primary concern is that any free-trade agreement with Vietnam would likely eliminate the steep tariff on footwear imported from that country, making Vietnamese sneakers even cheaper than they already are.

New Balance officials said removing the tariff would also undermine years of efforts at the company’s five New England factories to compete against cheap foreign labor. The plants employ 1,000 workers.

Those employees earn upward of $10 an hour, plus benefits, while labor costs in China are about $1.50 an hour, and even less in Vietnam.

With the support of some New England legislators, the company is hoping that an unusual exemption can be created in any agreement with Vietnam to maintain the tariff on the shoes New Balance makes in the United States.

“Making footwear in the U.S. isn’t as easy or as profitable as making them overseas. If it were, every company would still be doing it,” DeMartini said. “We will continue to ask our negotiators to embrace President Obama’s manufacturing agenda and to save what is left of our nation’s once-vibrant shoemaking economy.”

For decades, shoes coming in from China and Vietnam, the largest sources of imported footwear, have been hit with tariffs of as much as 20 percent or more.

The shoe tariff, by pushing up the cost of importing shoes, means a pair of athletic shoes made in the Norridgewock factory or anywhere else in the United States is more competitive than it otherwise would be, and partially offsets the costs of higher wages paid here. On a pair of shoes that comes into the country valued at $30, for example, a typical 20 percent duty amounts to $6. (In many cases, the markup amounts to 100 percent, meaning those shoes would sell to consumers for $72.)

As workers in New England look around at the shuttered textile and shoe mills that still dot many towns, relics of the industrial era, some see the shoe tariff as the least the United States could do for what’s left of the battered industry. In their view, removing the tariff only rewards those companies like Nike and Adidas that have shut U.S. factories and concentrated their operations elsewhere.

Adidas’ last plant was in Kutztown, Pa. Joanne Twomey, 65, worked at the Nike factory in Saco, Maine, until it closed in the mid-’80s, the last significant Nike shoe plant in the United States.

“I have not bought one thing from Nike ever since,” Twomey, now the mayor of nearby Biddeford, Maine, says. “I tell my children and grandchildren not to buy it either. They owed it to the people who got them to the top — the workers in the U.S. — to stay.”

About 25 percent of the shoes New Balance sells in North America are either manufactured or assembled at one of the five New England factories, despite the likelihood that owner Jim Davis could improve profits by joining other shoemakers overseas.

But while the tariff may be protecting New Balance’s 1,000 U.S. workers, it appears to have done little to protect the rest of the U.S. shoe industry, which employed as many as 250,000 people in the ’50s but fewer than 15,000 people today.

“The production of footwear is still very much a labor-intensive process,” said Erin Dobson, Nike spokeswoman. “This, combined with the cost of labor in the U.S., makes it cost-prohibitive based on the way product in our industry is manufactured today.”

She noted that while the company has no shoe manufacturing in the United States, it directly employs 22,000 in the country.

Since about 99 percent of shoes sold in the United States are imported, removal of tariffs likely would save consumers money and help improve profits for retailers and companies that do their manufacturing overseas. Those companies have banded together in recent years to lobby against what they call “the shoe tax.”

“If you are buying shoes, you’re paying a shoe tax,” said Nate Herman of the American Apparel and Footwear Association, which has led the fight against the shoe tariff and supports the Trans-Pacific Partnership. “For products that are no longer produced here and haven’t been produced here for decades, there’s no sense for consumers to be paying it.”

The employees at the factory here shrug off the cost to consumers, and question how it is that a move to save jobs could be considered bad economic policy, as economists often say, when jobs are so hard to come by and they have tried so hard to compete.

Since 2004, the 350 workers at the plant have increased daily production by nearly 9 percent while significantly reducing errors, plant manager Raye Wentworth said. The Maine unemployment rate is nearly 8 percent.

Some like Michelle Witham, 40, count three generations involved with footwear manufacturing. She works at the New Balance factor here, as did her parents. Her grandparents worked in the same building, too, years ago, when it was a shoe factory for another company.

“When I started, people would say, ‘Oh you don’t want to work there. They’re not going to be around for long. They ain’t got a chance,’ ” Witham said. “But I’ve been here 20-something years now.”

“If customers pay a few more dollars for a pair of shoes, then so be it,” said Sheri Fuller, 54, who has worked at the factory for 24 years. “If you take jobs away from people, the hit is going to be a lot bigger.”

Similar articles:

Marketplace News

Marketplace

Guidelines for posting on bangordailynews.com

The Bangor Daily News encourages comments about stories, but you must follow our terms of service.

In brief:

  1. Keep it civil and stay on topic
  2. No vulgarity, racial slurs, name-calling or personal attacks.
  3. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked.

The primary rule here is pretty simple: Treat others with the same respect you'd want for yourself. Here are some guidelines (see more):

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=719791897 Chris Grindle

    Slap a tariff on all shoes imported into the U.S. which brings the cost in line with U.S. manufacturers…and put all the money collected into a fund to assist workers in the U.S. displaced by corporations shipping jobs overseas for cheap labor where it only cost pennies a day to live. Problem solved. Take the profit out of moving our jobs overseas. Close them off with a tariff to the U.S. market,and we’ll see some changes being made. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/royce.albert Royce Albert

    New Balance makes some of the best running shoes there are, I have worn them off and on for the last 30 years. About three years back I was shoe shopping and saw by the packaging they are made in America. They are now the only running shoe I buy!

  • http://www.facebook.com/royce.albert Royce Albert

    New Balance makes some of the best running shoes there are, I have worn them off and on for the last 30 years. About three years back I was shoe shopping and saw by the packaging they are made in America. They are now the only running shoe I buy!

  • http://www.facebook.com/royce.albert Royce Albert

    New Balance makes some of the best running shoes there are, I have worn them off and on for the last 30 years. About three years back I was shoe shopping and saw by the packaging they are made in America. They are now the only running shoe I buy!

  • http://www.facebook.com/royce.albert Royce Albert

    New Balance makes some of the best running shoes there are, I have worn them off and on for the last 30 years. About three years back I was shoe shopping and saw by the packaging they are made in America. They are now the only running shoe I buy!

  • http://www.facebook.com/royce.albert Royce Albert

    New Balance makes some of the best running shoes there are, I have worn them off and on for the last 30 years. About three years back I was shoe shopping and saw by the packaging they are made in America. They are now the only running shoe I buy!

  • Anonymous

    Excellent idea Grindle though I’d add a couple of  things to the tariff.  Make sure that anything imported is manufactured under the same environmental and human rights laws that we have here in the U.S.

  • Anonymous

    Excellent idea Grindle though I’d add a couple of  things to the tariff.  Make sure that anything imported is manufactured under the same environmental and human rights laws that we have here in the U.S.

  • Anonymous

    Excellent idea Grindle though I’d add a couple of  things to the tariff.  Make sure that anything imported is manufactured under the same environmental and human rights laws that we have here in the U.S.

  • Anonymous

    I wear them primarily because they are made in this country.  Nice shoe!

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_TJYZV7JWWJCPG7BX65EM6UOHZ4 Skowhegan Resident

    From what i understand, Skowhegan and Norridewock are so dependent on New Balance taxes, the towns would collapse into bankruptcy if New Balance left the towns.

  • Anonymous

    Boston wants u back.

  • Anonymous

    Having traveled to Vietnam on my high school graduation trip in 1969, I will buy not a thing from there-I already gave at the office.  I used to wonder why my Dad did not like Japanese products. He fought in the Pacific in WWII, now I understand. They (People’s Republic of Vietnam) have not provided a full accounting of our MIA military personnel from the war why would we enter into a trade agreement with them designed to put our people out of work? I used to wear Carhartt clothes, now they are made in the ‘Nam. New Balance are made here by Americans, they will get my money every time. Google “Made in the USA” there are a myriad of websites dedicated to US only made products. Do our nation a favor and buy them.

  • Anonymous

    Having traveled to Vietnam on my high school graduation trip in 1969, I will buy not a thing from there-I already gave at the office.  I used to wonder why my Dad did not like Japanese products. He fought in the Pacific in WWII, now I understand. They (People’s Republic of Vietnam) have not provided a full accounting of our MIA military personnel from the war why would we enter into a trade agreement with them designed to put our people out of work? I used to wear Carhartt clothes, now they are made in the ‘Nam. New Balance are made here by Americans, they will get my money every time. Google “Made in the USA” there are a myriad of websites dedicated to US only made products. Do our nation a favor and buy them.

  • Anonymous

    Having traveled to Vietnam on my high school graduation trip in 1969, I will buy not a thing from there-I already gave at the office.  I used to wonder why my Dad did not like Japanese products. He fought in the Pacific in WWII, now I understand. They (People’s Republic of Vietnam) have not provided a full accounting of our MIA military personnel from the war why would we enter into a trade agreement with them designed to put our people out of work? I used to wear Carhartt clothes, now they are made in the ‘Nam. New Balance are made here by Americans, they will get my money every time. Google “Made in the USA” there are a myriad of websites dedicated to US only made products. Do our nation a favor and buy them.

  • Anonymous

    Having traveled to Vietnam on my high school graduation trip in 1969, I will buy not a thing from there-I already gave at the office.  I used to wonder why my Dad did not like Japanese products. He fought in the Pacific in WWII, now I understand. They (People’s Republic of Vietnam) have not provided a full accounting of our MIA military personnel from the war why would we enter into a trade agreement with them designed to put our people out of work? I used to wear Carhartt clothes, now they are made in the ‘Nam. New Balance are made here by Americans, they will get my money every time. Google “Made in the USA” there are a myriad of websites dedicated to US only made products. Do our nation a favor and buy them.

  • Anonymous

    Having traveled to Vietnam on my high school graduation trip in 1969, I will buy not a thing from there-I already gave at the office.  I used to wonder why my Dad did not like Japanese products. He fought in the Pacific in WWII, now I understand. They (People’s Republic of Vietnam) have not provided a full accounting of our MIA military personnel from the war why would we enter into a trade agreement with them designed to put our people out of work? I used to wear Carhartt clothes, now they are made in the ‘Nam. New Balance are made here by Americans, they will get my money every time. Google “Made in the USA” there are a myriad of websites dedicated to US only made products. Do our nation a favor and buy them.

  • Anonymous

    Roxanne Quimby would like to offer everyone at New Balance a new job working around her new park.

  • Anonymous

    Roxanne Quimby would like to offer everyone at New Balance a new job working around her new park.

  • Anonymous

    Roxanne Quimby would like to offer everyone at New Balance a new job working around her new park.

  • Anonymous

    Roxanne Quimby would like to offer everyone at New Balance a new job working around her new park.

  • Anonymous

    Roxanne Quimby would like to offer everyone at New Balance a new job working around her new park.

  • Anonymous

    I would like to see manufacurers like Nike, who do not make a single item in their line in this country, lose the ability to write off their advertising here as a business expense. That should be reserved for companies that actually manufacture products here. When Nike pays a Tiger Woods or Michael Jordan $40 million a year to endorse their products, they are allowed to write that $40 million off their corporate taxes. That write off has to be made up for from someone. That someone is the US taxpayers, who seem to be finding it more difficult to find a job that will support their family.

  • Anonymous

    I do too, but they also are guilty of utilizing foreign manufacturing in their shoe lines. I purchased a pair of NB shoes last year and was suprised when I got home and noticed on the box the label said Made in China. I guess I have to be more observant. It will not happen again if I can help it. I have already informed my wife that I will throw out anything made by Nike.

  • Anonymous

    New Balance shoes are the only shoes I buy, unfortunately that is probably one of the few things that I try to keep buying that is made in the US as so much other stuff just comes from every where else.  I’d buy all american if I could.  Free trade agreements sound good at first until the reality of what happpens after they are made hits us little people.

  • Anonymous

    New Balance shoes are the only shoes I buy, unfortunately that is probably one of the few things that I try to keep buying that is made in the US as so much other stuff just comes from every where else.  I’d buy all american if I could.  Free trade agreements sound good at first until the reality of what happpens after they are made hits us little people.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_AU3XEUHETZ7OOMNC6WBWJCKTDA Katherine

    New Balance running shoes are the only ones that fit my swift, but deformed feet. I have been running for 30 years and have only bought NB shoes. Now, if only I could still run as fast as I did all those years ago….

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_AU3XEUHETZ7OOMNC6WBWJCKTDA Katherine

    New Balance running shoes are the only ones that fit my swift, but deformed feet. I have been running for 30 years and have only bought NB shoes. Now, if only I could still run as fast as I did all those years ago….

  • Anonymous

    It’s really nice to see people trying to buy AMERICAN I wish we all did the same! It’s funny we had a mixer die and I said to my wife it must be old, why she says ,me because it’s made in AMERICA!!! When you think about it it’s sad

  • http://www.facebook.com/ckmom Pat Smith Mahoney

    My husband and I buy new shoes every year at the NB outlets.  We make a point of traveling to Skowhegan particularly.  The fact that these shoes are primarily made in the USA though some are partially USA makes these the only sneakers we buy.

  • Anonymous

    One wonders where the Maine based business reporters are-out to lunch.  This story is by a reporter from the Washington Post.  They probably didn’t receive a press release that they could “build” a story around. 

  • Anonymous

    One wonders where the Maine based business reporters are-out to lunch.  This story is by a reporter from the Washington Post.  They probably didn’t receive a press release that they could “build” a story around. 

  • Anonymous

    One wonders where the Maine based business reporters are-out to lunch.  This story is by a reporter from the Washington Post.  They probably didn’t receive a press release that they could “build” a story around. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Benjamin-Barr/1615284594 Benjamin Barr

    I have been buying and promoting US made products for decades.  Yes, I may have to pay a bit more for them, but it is worth it to keep fellow Americans employed and businesses here.  My first pair of running shoes was by New Balance and 32 years later I continue to run in New Balance shoes that are made in the USA.  Keep our people and shoes here…a New England tradition….

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_OA4CY7VEIB2S453LCNHIVU5DMQ Joe Johnson

    buying american needs to be a major movement.

  • Anonymous

    I have used New Balance exclusively for about 30 years also. Initially they were the only shoe to offer wide widths and got me hooked. As long as they are around, it’s the only shoe I’ll buy!

  • Anonymous

    I have used New Balance exclusively for about 30 years also. Initially they were the only shoe to offer wide widths and got me hooked. As long as they are around, it’s the only shoe I’ll buy!

  • Anonymous

    It’s actually amazing that this factory has managed to hold on this long.  That being said, I would strong encourage the folks there to have a good backup plan ready.

  • Anonymous

    It’s actually amazing that this factory has managed to hold on this long.  That being said, I would strong encourage the folks there to have a good backup plan ready.

  • Anonymous

    is it possible to have someone post all of the shoe numbers that are made in the us.

  • Anonymous

    is it possible to have someone post all of the shoe numbers that are made in the us.

  • Anonymous

    is it possible to have someone post all of the shoe numbers that are made in the us.

  • Anonymous

    Removing tariffs just rewards companies for shipping jobs overseas.  Another bad idea just like NAFTA.  If we keep shipping jobs overseas,  who will be left to actually buy anything?  My wife and I travel from the New Hampshire seacoast once a year to either the Oxford or Skowhegan stores and buy three or four pairs each.  Good quality and good fit can’t be found in that cheap Chinese garbage( I check the labels).

  • Anonymous

    Removing tariffs just rewards companies for shipping jobs overseas.  Another bad idea just like NAFTA.  If we keep shipping jobs overseas,  who will be left to actually buy anything?  My wife and I travel from the New Hampshire seacoast once a year to either the Oxford or Skowhegan stores and buy three or four pairs each.  Good quality and good fit can’t be found in that cheap Chinese garbage( I check the labels).

  • Anonymous

    Slap a tariff on all shoes imported into the U.S. which brings the cost in line with U.S. manufacturers…and put all the money collected into a fund to assist workers in the U.S. displaced by corporations shipping jobs overseas for cheap labor where it only cost pennies a day to live. Problem solved.
    *******************************************************

    Chris,  there already IS a tariff on shoes imported into the U.S.  Your pal Obama wants to REMOVE the tariff by enacting the Trans-Pacific Partership.  He thinks this general agreement on tariffs and trade will somehow spark economic recovery in the U.S. because now all those peasants in Vietnam and China who earn $1.50 a day will magically buy U.S. manufactured paper!  What a freakin’ hoot!  Please ask your buddy Obama what he does now with the tariffs collected on all the shoes imported from Asia…..you know, Nike, Adidas, Reebok…and that’s just the sneakers—I haven’t even scratched the surface—there’s almost everything carried by Winterport Boot, a ton of shoes from Cabella’s, everything in Wal-Mart, most of the ones in K-Mart and Target…shall I go on?

  • Anonymous

    is it possible to have someone post all of the shoe numbers that are made in the us.     
    ***********************************************************

    are you asking for shoe manufacturers in the U.S. or specific New Balance sneakers made in the U.S.?  I was searching the Sears website for a new pair and found the Women’s 850 True Balance Toning sneakers to be listed as imported.  The Sears site doesn’t say where they are imported from. 

  • Anonymous

    Dexter Shoe made this a major campaign in the 80′s and 90′s and did well with it for a while.  However, after a while it faded as many Americans became oblivious to the “Made In USA” label when times were good and jobs were plentiful.  It’s different now.  People should buy American made products whenever possible.  Free trade agreements benefit only the poor countries to whom our manufacturing jobs are imported.  Also, if the parent company is USA based the bottom line gets bigger so the rich get richer and the average American gets poorer.  I really don’t know why anybody would support these free trade agreements here in New England and rust-belt states as they have decimated manufacturing jobs for several decades.

  • Anonymous

    Hey LePage, lets hear from you!!! Jobs, Jobs Jobs, What ya think?

  • Anonymous

    Without manufacturing in the US, the economy is doomed. Too many middle level management positions has created a country with a huge trade imbalance. How does the current administration figure that by removing tariffs, the job market will improve???? Does anyone in Washington have a clue about what is going on in America? You cannot run a country with jobs of pencil pushing and no productivity. I still marvel at the outsourcing. Some of the time I have no idea what the person somewhere out of this country is saying. I fear buying anything made in China, especially dishware or kids’ toys due to their use of lead in glazes and paint. Actually, we really don’t know what is in it.

    Yes, I drive an American car—and readers, do not tell me about the parts being made elsewhere and how Toyota manufactures and provides jobs in the US. Their corporate dollars are going back to Japan.

    Buy American and put us to work.

  • Anonymous

    Obamaeconomics. He claims to be for the worker.  Then why would he approve of a free trade pact with a country that has terrible worker rights laws? Obama..one and done in 2012.

  • Anonymous

    I have bought no other athletic shoe since 1983. They are the best, and if New Balance ever closes, I will buy a lifetime supply. 

  • Anonymous

    I have bought no other athletic shoe since 1983. They are the best, and if New Balance ever closes, I will buy a lifetime supply. 

  • Anonymous

    I have bought no other athletic shoe since 1983. They are the best, and if New Balance ever closes, I will buy a lifetime supply. 

  • Anonymous

    The only way the Government will stop the free trade agreements is if the people speak out, and most people sadly DO NOT CARE.  

  • Anonymous

    Ben, I like your style. I have been doing the same thing, and it makes me feel good that over the last 20 years I have sent less than $4000.00 in purchases to China. I do keep track!

  • Anonymous

    It is because New Balance is a private company. If the owner ever sells, the factories will be gone in a second.  Send a letter or call the owner, let him know how much we appreciate everything he does for this Country.

  • Anonymous

    I’m in favor of free trade. Trade amongst somewhat equal partners is a good thing. Both sides win.

    On the other hand when we give away our manufacturing ability we will only be able to export our agricultural products and raw materials. This would probably make the Tea Party happy because they are always harping on returning to the years when the Constitution was written.

    I can recall when NAFTA was being written and all the powers that be praised the rise of the “Service Economy” that would replace our manufacturing economy. It seems that our high tech service economy has gone the way of our manufacturing economy. The only service jobs left are low paying.

  • Anonymous

    I bought my first New Balance sneakers 3 years ago, wore them running and to the gym every day for over a year.   Now I wear them mowing the lawn etc.  Seams are still all together, tread is still glued to the sole.  In that same time period I have gone through multiple pairs of Nike and Adidas sneakers that only get light weekend use that ripped apart, or came unglued.  I love the function/durability of the NB brand, I just wish they made something that looked a little better for everyday wear.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kelly-Green/100002233661222 Kelly Green

    Get rid of NAFTA, CAFTA and the rest of these trade agreements and also levy a heavy tariff on all manufactured goods coming in.  Corporations who move jobs overseas should get their own special tax bracket in the corporate tax code to make it cost prohibitive to sell us out to a Vietnamese sweatshop.  Truth be told, it’s American corporations selling us out.

  • Anonymous

    Anyone else find it ironic that New Balance’s most famous customer, Slick Willy Clinton, was the one who brought us “free” trade and completely destroyed the shoe industry in America? Along with just about every other manufacturing job. I have friends that work at New Balance and I would go barefoot before I would wear any other sneaker. I bought a pair of American made Chippawa work boots last fall for $250. The salesman at the shoe store tried very hard to sell me on the Chinese version of the exact same boot for $150. He looked at me like I had two heads when I went with the American version, even though it was an extra $100. He asked me why I would pay the extra $100 when I didn’t have to? I told him that the job I save might be my own someday. He was a 20 something and didn’t get it at all. All we can do is buy American while we still can and then wait for the other shoe to drop. Pun intended.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    I will only buy New Balance from now on.

  • Anonymous

    No Kelly. It is the “American” politicians who are selling us out to the highest bidder. The corporations will always blindly follow the bottom line and will never consider the cost to anyone else. Our dim witted leaders in Washington are the ones that dropped the import tariffs and practically invited the corporations to pull up stakes and run to the cheap labor, lack of environmental laws, lack of labor laws, and larger bottom lines overseas. Our founding fathers would have tarred and feathered their pathetic hides for what they have done to the American dream. We just whine about it on blogs and continue to turn a blind eye to the destruction of America by greedy fecal stains. Myself included.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_DK2NSO2GYJSIRQOPYAXLKVEIA4 James

    It’s so sad but the United States is becoming known as the land of lost jobs and dead soldiers. The middle class has voted their way into extinction. Where do we go from here?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_DK2NSO2GYJSIRQOPYAXLKVEIA4 James

    It’s so sad but the United States is becoming known as the land of lost jobs and dead soldiers. The middle class has voted their way into extinction. Where do we go from here?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XYWAGMEY2Z2T7BY32M2SHIURKA Chris Bowker

    These are some of the best made and looking shoes!   Lets spread this article around using social media to promote the brand and save the jobs here!

  • Anonymous

    All my shoes are (except an old pair of Red Wing dress shoes) are from New Balance.  I’m proud to support American jobs.

    I also have a dozen or so decade old/older Hathaway shirts in my wardrobe.  I miss them.  Those old shirts still look as new as they did when I first bought them and have held-up better than the foreign made crap I’ve been forced to buy since Hathaway closed.

  • Anonymous

    I’ve been buying new Balance shoes ever since I moved here 7 years ago. I suggest that anyone who really cases about Maine people, and the few manufacturing jobs we still have follow my lead as soon as possible. New Balance strikes me as the kind of corporate citizen we need more of, and the only way to encourage that is by using our dollars to vote for them.
    Yes, I’ve bought the bargain basement shoes from the low price smiley face boys at Walmasrt, even treaded over to the dreaded Mardens and Renys and bought some of their low price garbage. New Balance’s products will long outlast that other junk, and they are priced competitively with other quality shoemakers.
    Time for us to wake up, we can cry and moan all we want about how US corporations move jobs overseas after they built their bank accounts on the backs of american workers, but the only way to stop it is to stop buying it!

  • Anonymous

    I’ve been buying new Balance shoes ever since I moved here 7 years ago. I suggest that anyone who really cases about Maine people, and the few manufacturing jobs we still have follow my lead as soon as possible. New Balance strikes me as the kind of corporate citizen we need more of, and the only way to encourage that is by using our dollars to vote for them.
    Yes, I’ve bought the bargain basement shoes from the low price smiley face boys at Walmasrt, even treaded over to the dreaded Mardens and Renys and bought some of their low price garbage. New Balance’s products will long outlast that other junk, and they are priced competitively with other quality shoemakers.
    Time for us to wake up, we can cry and moan all we want about how US corporations move jobs overseas after they built their bank accounts on the backs of american workers, but the only way to stop it is to stop buying it!

  • Anonymous

    I have read this article with interest and i am impressed that new balance is an American company.  Label in my New Balance 600′s made in China.  Please explain.

  • Anonymous

    I have read this article with interest and i am impressed that new balance is an American company.  Label in my New Balance 600′s made in China.  Please explain.

  • Anonymous

    I have read this article with interest and i am impressed that new balance is an American company.  Label in my New Balance 600′s made in China.  Please explain.

  • Anonymous

    I have read this article with interest and i am impressed that new balance is an American company.  Label in my New Balance 600′s made in China.  Please explain.

  • Anonymous

    I have read this article with interest and i am impressed that new balance is an American company.  Label in my New Balance 600′s made in China.  Please explain.

  • Anonymous

    I have read this article with interest and i am impressed that new balance is an American company.  Label in my New Balance 600′s made in China.  Please explain.

  • Anonymous

    Why does our government send our business overseas.  So many people lose jobs this way.  Is this the only thing Obama can come up with.  How can we buy american if we are sending it all overseas to be created.  I recently heard that LL Bean stopped making there products in Maine and started having items produced in other countries like china.  Again WHY…  

  • Anonymous

    Why does our government send our business overseas.  So many people lose jobs this way.  Is this the only thing Obama can come up with.  How can we buy american if we are sending it all overseas to be created.  I recently heard that LL Bean stopped making there products in Maine and started having items produced in other countries like china.  Again WHY…  

  • http://www.facebook.com/suemac116 Susan Grant MacDonald

    Well, my next pair of shoes will be New Balance.  Thanks for the informative article.

  • http://www.facebook.com/suemac116 Susan Grant MacDonald

    Well, my next pair of shoes will be New Balance.  Thanks for the informative article.

  • Anonymous

    Why should we give up American jobs so the corporations can make more money with cheap foreign labor?  This is simply wrong. 

    Unless we speak out now and often, our economy, already in serious trouble, will really be down the tubes.

    We manufacture arms for the world, but little of use value for regular people in America anymore.  I remember when we were proud of our manufacturing capabilities.  Not so now, unless we demand high tariffs on all imported goods.

    No more corporate welfare in the form of “trade” agreements.  Undo them all. 

  • Anonymous

    New Balance provides a quality product. I always got my son’s track shoes from them, and my NB hiking boots seem to be lasting forever. And purchasing their products supports Maine families and the Maine businesses who benefit from the “trickle down” effect of those families having cash to spend at the gas station, grocery store, etc. NB products are a great value all the way around. 

  • Anonymous

    Protectionist trade policies are the antithesis of GOP dogma.  The republicans claim it is unAmerican to limit a persons right to profit in any way possible.  That is why our jobs have gone overseas.  The loss of these good paying manufacturing jobs, and the concomitant rise in poverty pay for service sector jobs, leaves many Americans no choice but to buy cheap imported crap!  This in turn closes more American businesses. It is a vicious cycle. Eventually these wages of servitude will make it impossible for Americans to buy even the imported stuff.  You cannot live on WalMart wages and shop at WalMart, despite the prices on their cheap imported crap.  The ideology of GOP economics is very short sighted and based entirely on greed.  They have no long term plan that sustains the greatness of America.  GOP economics are solely responsible for the decline of the American middle class, which in turn causes the decline in all things that rely on middle class support such as education, new business development, our infrastructure, and ultimately even the national budget that is in such dire straits right now.

  • Anonymous

    Not quite sure of the legal details, but it also seems that a requirement of importing shoes into the USA is that they must contain a certain amount of leather, however decorative.  Much of the leather I have seen on running shoes is just that–it is not like it is there to provide any waterprooofing, since immediately adjacent is a panel of open weavework, for ventilation.

    For those of us who for religious or ethical reasons do not wear leather, New Balance is the best and often only choice, if you do not want to wear plastic Crocs.

    NBs are well made, they just keep lasting and lasting (how many mowing and house-painting sneaks can one save up?).  And they are also know as the “Fat man’s friend” because they come in wide sizes and have sufficient padding for the pounds ;)

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kelly-Green/100002233661222 Kelly Green

    Nope.  It’s the corporations that have bought the politicians.  They’re at the very apex of this whole bowel movement overseas and have the most to gain.

  • Anonymous

    “The company could make far more money if, like Nike and Adidas, it shifted virtually all of these jobs to low-wage countries.”

    Strange, the New Balance I just bought show, “Made in China”!!

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Money in a “trust fund” would be an excellent idea, except, too many hands in the pot would only leave cents for the picking…

  • Anonymous

    Like I said Kelly. The politicians sell out to corporations or anyone else with the stinky green paper that they lust after like heroin junkies. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? lol. Maybe we are both right?

  • Anonymous

    Like I said Kelly. The politicians sell out to corporations or anyone else with the stinky green paper that they lust after like heroin junkies. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? lol. Maybe we are both right?

  • Anonymous

    Like I said Kelly. The politicians sell out to corporations or anyone else with the stinky green paper that they lust after like heroin junkies. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? lol. Maybe we are both right?

  • Anonymous

    Like I said Kelly. The politicians sell out to corporations or anyone else with the stinky green paper that they lust after like heroin junkies. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? lol. Maybe we are both right?

  • Anonymous

    Like I said Kelly. The politicians sell out to corporations or anyone else with the stinky green paper that they lust after like heroin junkies. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? lol. Maybe we are both right?

  • Anonymous

    Like I said Kelly. The politicians sell out to corporations or anyone else with the stinky green paper that they lust after like heroin junkies. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? lol. Maybe we are both right?

  • Anonymous

    Like I said Kelly. The politicians sell out to corporations or anyone else with the stinky green paper that they lust after like heroin junkies. Which came first, the chicken or the egg? lol. Maybe we are both right?

  • Anonymous

    Because the people who ultimately BUY the shoes don’t really feel like paying for:

    minimum wage
    federal unemployment insurance
    state unemployment insurance
    workers comp insurance
    sexual harassment training
    gender/racial quotas
    social security & medicare taxes
    Obamacare
    right to know/MSDS training
    Dirigo offset payments
    OSHA mandates
    DEP mandates
    EPA mandates

    and all the  other garbage that comes with employing people in this state & country.

    That’s the legacy of electing people like Olive Oyl, Silly Susan, Libby Mitchell and Emily Cain to positions of authority.

  • Anonymous

    Have you ever noticed that shoes made  in other countries are pointed in the heels instead of nicely rounded? No one has a heel that will fit in the heel of these shoes. In my opinion nothing that is made overseas,  is as good as that of American made. Not to mention the vast amount of jobs that were taken from American workers. Trying to talk to a foreign person when you have problems with your computer, VCR or whatever is like talking to a wall. Sure they speak English but the comprehension isn’t there.  Bring back the jobs to America.

  • Anonymous

    When Hathaway shirts went by the wayside that was another tragedy. Best shirt ever made.

  • Anonymous

    When Hathaway shirts went by the wayside that was another tragedy. Best shirt ever made.

  • Anonymous

    When Hathaway shirts went by the wayside that was another tragedy. Best shirt ever made.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kelly-Green/100002233661222 Kelly Green

    I can agree that we are both correct.  They’re all scum in my book.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Kelly-Green/100002233661222 Kelly Green

    I can agree that we are both correct.  They’re all scum in my book.

  • Anonymous

    Could it be more profit??

  • Anonymous

    Could it be more profit??

  • Anonymous

    US Congress people, this is  you Michaud, Pingret, Snowe & Collins vote “Hell NO” on this “Free Trade Agreement”. And while your at it repeal NAFTA! Nothing has hurt US jobs like this treaty!

  • Anonymous

    New Balance has a huge line of products and sell 7 million pairs of shoes each year. They’ve never claimed to make all of them in the US, and frankly, the 1,000 workers they employ could not produce that many. But, they are the last major shoe manufacturer to still try and make shoes here in this country. Kudos to them for their effort.

    Nike loves to claim that they employ 22, 000 workers in this country. I bet 20,000 of them work at low paying jobs in their mall stores or warehouses. Think about that when your kid wants to buy a $250 dollar pair of “Air Jordan’s” that probably cost $10 dollars to make.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • Anonymous

    Straight to you know where, in a hand basket, of course.

  • http://www.facebook.com/raymond.dunton Raymond Dunton

    They say hindsight is 20/20, but it is too bad more Americans didn’t listen to Ross Perot when he ran for President in 1992.   I wish I had.  He said that if you allow free trade agreements (specifically NAFTA), you will hear a ‘giant sucking sound.’  That was what he expected to happen if NAFTA was approved (which it was) and now we have even more free trade agreements with have further increased that ‘giant sucking sound’ of American jobs going overseas.  Maybe he can run again in 2012 and fix the problems that have been created by free trade agreements. Probably not, but hopefully someone will run that does want to end these free trade agreements.  These are killing the US econonmy because we are losing most of our manufacturing jobs.  The problem is now that most companies have their manufacturing operations overseas, how do we get them back to the United States?

    If you don’t know what I am referring to, I found this on Youtube:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ7kn2-GEmM

  • http://www.facebook.com/raymond.dunton Raymond Dunton

    They say hindsight is 20/20, but it is too bad more Americans didn’t listen to Ross Perot when he ran for President in 1992.   I wish I had.  He said that if you allow free trade agreements (specifically NAFTA), you will hear a ‘giant sucking sound.’  That was what he expected to happen if NAFTA was approved (which it was) and now we have even more free trade agreements with have further increased that ‘giant sucking sound’ of American jobs going overseas.  Maybe he can run again in 2012 and fix the problems that have been created by free trade agreements. Probably not, but hopefully someone will run that does want to end these free trade agreements.  These are killing the US econonmy because we are losing most of our manufacturing jobs.  The problem is now that most companies have their manufacturing operations overseas, how do we get them back to the United States?

    If you don’t know what I am referring to, I found this on Youtube:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ7kn2-GEmM

  • http://www.facebook.com/raymond.dunton Raymond Dunton

    They say hindsight is 20/20, but it is too bad more Americans didn’t listen to Ross Perot when he ran for President in 1992.   I wish I had.  He said that if you allow free trade agreements (specifically NAFTA), you will hear a ‘giant sucking sound.’  That was what he expected to happen if NAFTA was approved (which it was) and now we have even more free trade agreements with have further increased that ‘giant sucking sound’ of American jobs going overseas.  Maybe he can run again in 2012 and fix the problems that have been created by free trade agreements. Probably not, but hopefully someone will run that does want to end these free trade agreements.  These are killing the US econonmy because we are losing most of our manufacturing jobs.  The problem is now that most companies have their manufacturing operations overseas, how do we get them back to the United States?

    If you don’t know what I am referring to, I found this on Youtube:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ7kn2-GEmM

  • http://www.facebook.com/raymond.dunton Raymond Dunton

    They say hindsight is 20/20, but it is too bad more Americans didn’t listen to Ross Perot when he ran for President in 1992.   I wish I had.  He said that if you allow free trade agreements (specifically NAFTA), you will hear a ‘giant sucking sound.’  That was what he expected to happen if NAFTA was approved (which it was) and now we have even more free trade agreements with have further increased that ‘giant sucking sound’ of American jobs going overseas.  Maybe he can run again in 2012 and fix the problems that have been created by free trade agreements. Probably not, but hopefully someone will run that does want to end these free trade agreements.  These are killing the US econonmy because we are losing most of our manufacturing jobs.  The problem is now that most companies have their manufacturing operations overseas, how do we get them back to the United States?

    If you don’t know what I am referring to, I found this on Youtube:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ7kn2-GEmM

  • http://www.facebook.com/raymond.dunton Raymond Dunton

    They say hindsight is 20/20, but it is too bad more Americans didn’t listen to Ross Perot when he ran for President in 1992.   I wish I had.  He said that if you allow free trade agreements (specifically NAFTA), you will hear a ‘giant sucking sound.’  That was what he expected to happen if NAFTA was approved (which it was) and now we have even more free trade agreements with have further increased that ‘giant sucking sound’ of American jobs going overseas.  Maybe he can run again in 2012 and fix the problems that have been created by free trade agreements. Probably not, but hopefully someone will run that does want to end these free trade agreements.  These are killing the US econonmy because we are losing most of our manufacturing jobs.  The problem is now that most companies have their manufacturing operations overseas, how do we get them back to the United States?

    If you don’t know what I am referring to, I found this on Youtube:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ7kn2-GEmM

  • http://www.facebook.com/raymond.dunton Raymond Dunton

    They say hindsight is 20/20, but it is too bad more Americans didn’t listen to Ross Perot when he ran for President in 1992.   I wish I had.  He said that if you allow free trade agreements (specifically NAFTA), you will hear a ‘giant sucking sound.’  That was what he expected to happen if NAFTA was approved (which it was) and now we have even more free trade agreements with have further increased that ‘giant sucking sound’ of American jobs going overseas.  Maybe he can run again in 2012 and fix the problems that have been created by free trade agreements. Probably not, but hopefully someone will run that does want to end these free trade agreements.  These are killing the US econonmy because we are losing most of our manufacturing jobs.  The problem is now that most companies have their manufacturing operations overseas, how do we get them back to the United States?

    If you don’t know what I am referring to, I found this on Youtube:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ7kn2-GEmM

  • http://www.facebook.com/raymond.dunton Raymond Dunton

    They say hindsight is 20/20, but it is too bad more Americans didn’t listen to Ross Perot when he ran for President in 1992.   I wish I had.  He said that if you allow free trade agreements (specifically NAFTA), you will hear a ‘giant sucking sound.’  That was what he expected to happen if NAFTA was approved (which it was) and now we have even more free trade agreements with have further increased that ‘giant sucking sound’ of American jobs going overseas.  Maybe he can run again in 2012 and fix the problems that have been created by free trade agreements. Probably not, but hopefully someone will run that does want to end these free trade agreements.  These are killing the US econonmy because we are losing most of our manufacturing jobs.  The problem is now that most companies have their manufacturing operations overseas, how do we get them back to the United States?

    If you don’t know what I am referring to, I found this on Youtube:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQ7kn2-GEmM

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    I love New Balance shoes! The first year I bought a pair, I wore them every day, never got a blister, the soles never came off, they were light and comfortable. I haven’t bought a different brand of shoes since! In fact, they are the only shoes I’ve been able to wear brand new and not have my feet hurting by the end of the day. I hope they’re in business for a long, long time. I recommend them to anyone!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    most of their shoes in their stores are made out of the country? Looks like we all need to move to China, Vietnam or Thailand for our jobs!!

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • Anonymous

    Obama will stop at nothing to ruin this country.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Harvey-Spears/100002044680595 Harvey Spears

    This is some story.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Harvey-Spears/100002044680595 Harvey Spears

    This is some story.

  • Anonymous

    There is not going to be any U.S. manufactured paper. All our trees are slowly being chiped and loaded into ships at Eastport and transported to forign mills and made into paper to be shipped back to us. That is one reason our Senators and Representives don’t want a national park in the north woods. They have done their best to rid us of our textile mills and shoe shops and are slowly picking away at our paper mills.

  • Anonymous

    There is not going to be any U.S. manufactured paper. All our trees are slowly being chiped and loaded into ships at Eastport and transported to forign mills and made into paper to be shipped back to us. That is one reason our Senators and Representives don’t want a national park in the north woods. They have done their best to rid us of our textile mills and shoe shops and are slowly picking away at our paper mills.

  • Anonymous

    There is not going to be any U.S. manufactured paper. All our trees are slowly being chiped and loaded into ships at Eastport and transported to forign mills and made into paper to be shipped back to us. That is one reason our Senators and Representives don’t want a national park in the north woods. They have done their best to rid us of our textile mills and shoe shops and are slowly picking away at our paper mills.

  • Anonymous

    There is not going to be any U.S. manufactured paper. All our trees are slowly being chiped and loaded into ships at Eastport and transported to forign mills and made into paper to be shipped back to us. That is one reason our Senators and Representives don’t want a national park in the north woods. They have done their best to rid us of our textile mills and shoe shops and are slowly picking away at our paper mills.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_YE3XFN7AV6MWMPAVMVPYVSEQEY sweetie

    A 100% markup on the shoes imported into the US?  I remember when all these free trade agreements were being negotiated.  We were being told these agreements were a win win for all.  The consumers would win by getting a lower priced product.  The foreign workers would win by getting better paying jobs which would eventually allow them to buy American made goods.  So far, the only winners are the big corporations.  These big corporations have slave labor conditions such that the workers are unable to afford the very products they make , yet, are still charging a small fortune in order to still make their billions every year.  Tell, me, how is that a win win for me?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_YE3XFN7AV6MWMPAVMVPYVSEQEY sweetie

    A 100% markup on the shoes imported into the US?  I remember when all these free trade agreements were being negotiated.  We were being told these agreements were a win win for all.  The consumers would win by getting a lower priced product.  The foreign workers would win by getting better paying jobs which would eventually allow them to buy American made goods.  So far, the only winners are the big corporations.  These big corporations have slave labor conditions such that the workers are unable to afford the very products they make , yet, are still charging a small fortune in order to still make their billions every year.  Tell, me, how is that a win win for me?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_YE3XFN7AV6MWMPAVMVPYVSEQEY sweetie

    A 100% markup on the shoes imported into the US?  I remember when all these free trade agreements were being negotiated.  We were being told these agreements were a win win for all.  The consumers would win by getting a lower priced product.  The foreign workers would win by getting better paying jobs which would eventually allow them to buy American made goods.  So far, the only winners are the big corporations.  These big corporations have slave labor conditions such that the workers are unable to afford the very products they make , yet, are still charging a small fortune in order to still make their billions every year.  Tell, me, how is that a win win for me?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_YE3XFN7AV6MWMPAVMVPYVSEQEY sweetie

    A 100% markup on the shoes imported into the US?  I remember when all these free trade agreements were being negotiated.  We were being told these agreements were a win win for all.  The consumers would win by getting a lower priced product.  The foreign workers would win by getting better paying jobs which would eventually allow them to buy American made goods.  So far, the only winners are the big corporations.  These big corporations have slave labor conditions such that the workers are unable to afford the very products they make , yet, are still charging a small fortune in order to still make their billions every year.  Tell, me, how is that a win win for me?

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_ULMTNAOAO3MM7OBVDXSPMZZLFY stevenm

    The new balance models that are made in the usa are :  574,587, 812, 993, 2002.  They also have a few other models that are assembled in the usa with foriegn materials.  The rest of their line (75% of their shoes) are made in china.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=588106330 Jennifer Libby

    If Nike and Adidas can outsource so much cheaper, then why do their shoes cost more than New Balance? New Balance makes a good US product and does not need to pay Michael Jordan to endorse it.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    If any of you folks need a new pair of sneakers get a pair of New Balance. They ae a good pair of shoes, comfortable and they last. Thanks Obama for trying to destroy one of our the USA’s last vestiges of quality athletic footwear. I hope the exemption goes through for the folks in Norridgewock. We would be losing jobs and a great  shoe maker.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Sad story about what happened in Vietnam to our soldiers. I’ve got close relatives who fought both the Japanese and Vietmanese and understand your point. I won’t buy from Vietnam even if their products are cheaper.

  • Anonymous

    Seventy-one (71) great letters & counting.   China et al manufacture poor quality products and U.S. businesses continue to import, open distribution centers, not stores, and sell junk.

    Twenty (20) million Illegals milking the welfare system as our economy spirals further towards the “last” Depression.

    And the “quality of life” for true legal working citizens of the USA continues to spiral downward.

  • Anonymous

    Seventy-one (71) great letters & counting.   China et al manufacture poor quality products and U.S. businesses continue to import, open distribution centers, not stores, and sell junk.

    Twenty (20) million Illegals milking the welfare system as our economy spirals further towards the “last” Depression.

    And the “quality of life” for true legal working citizens of the USA continues to spiral downward.

  • Anonymous

    I bought a pair of New Balance walking shoes in May, they are the most comfortable, lightest walking shoes I have ever bought. New balance is the only brand I will purchase, Maine people need jobs!

  • Anonymous

    I bought a pair of New Balance walking shoes in May, they are the most comfortable, lightest walking shoes I have ever bought. New balance is the only brand I will purchase, Maine people need jobs!

  • Anonymous

    I bought a pair of New Balance walking shoes in May, they are the most comfortable, lightest walking shoes I have ever bought. New balance is the only brand I will purchase, Maine people need jobs!

  • Anonymous

    I bought a pair of New Balance walking shoes in May, they are the most comfortable, lightest walking shoes I have ever bought. New balance is the only brand I will purchase, Maine people need jobs!

  • Anonymous

    I bought a pair of New Balance walking shoes in May, they are the most comfortable, lightest walking shoes I have ever bought. New balance is the only brand I will purchase, Maine people need jobs!

  • Anonymous

    I bought a pair of New Balance walking shoes in May, they are the most comfortable, lightest walking shoes I have ever bought. New balance is the only brand I will purchase, Maine people need jobs!

  • Anonymous

    Mr. lepageman :Thank you sir for your kind response, Nothing happened in Vietnam I was not trained for. What I was not trained for was what happened upon return.  Most folks think of us as drugged crazed zombies that like to kill. Nothing could be further from the truth. I was able to receive a graduate level education as a result of the GI Bill and spend my career helping those in need. Most of us are like this, we have given over and over to our nation, not because it is a PITA, but because it is because it is what we are supposed to do. We actually love and care about our nation. It is sad to see it going away in front of our eyes. Agreements such as this trade agreement are just more nails in the coffin of Uncle Sam. Our current leadership (SIC) in Washington knows little of service and sacrifice, everything  he has was handed to him on a silver platter, therefore he gives away on a consistent basis that what is not his to give. Please support American business, our very existence as a nation is dependent on it.

  • Anonymous

    Sorry, I have to respectfully disagree.  American corporations are in business to make money[any way they legally can],  I have no problem w/ that, so am I.  I provide a service and get paid for that service.  If no one wants to pay for my services, I don’t eat.

    Take evil company “A”:  They manufacture a widget in some piss-ant 3rd world Country and puts it in your local store for $50.

    Company “B” manufactures a similar product made here in the good ole US of A.  They put it on you local store shelf for $100.

    Which of the two products do you think the average American consumer will buy?  I am going out on a limb here, but I say it’s the $50 product.  Companies see we don’t really care about the poor 3rd world workers that make a few dollars a day and move more production oversees.

    Since we do agree that Big evil corporations are in the game to make money, what do you think would happen if all Americans stopped buying crap from oversees?  The store would be full for $50 widgets and the $100 items would be flying off the shelves.  Company “B” would make record profits, increase production, create jobs, and their share holders would be happy.  While Company “A” would either go out of business or shift manufacturing back home. 

    Corporations only do what we ask of them.  We want to buy more [cheap]stuff at a lower price point. So in essence, we are our own worst enemy.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_II4BGRECXWKAFHRRND4RDCU7QQ Kirk

    Hopefully they stay around. I prefer American made products any day compared to cheap chinese made products. 

  • Anonymous

    Picked up a pair of boots in a store one day made buy Boston Shoe with a picture of the American flag on the tag. Fine print read “Made in China” DECEPTIVE!

  • Anonymous

    This just another example of trying to move us from a sovereign nation to
    one of the new world order. Bush Sr. and Clinton were wrong in promoting
    NAFTA. I cannot blame any business for doing what’s best for their company
    and going where things are done cheaper, the corporate tax is far less and the margin
    of profit is greater. This country is more in tune to killing business than promoting
    it. We are so ready to send our money and businesses to other nations to be part
    of this globalization mantra when in reality it is killing this nation. We will shell out
    2B to Brazil to BUY their oil when we could buy and sell most of the oil producing
    countries with what we have. But oh no! We got to save the planet and do everything
    in our power to prevent our companies from utilizing the resources we have in abundance.
    Before we crucify companies for doing what any smart business would do, we all should
    pat ourselves on the back for letting our politicans dismantle what was once a great
    manufacturing nation. We also should applaud ourselves for buying all the junk sent into
    the U.S. So don’t scream too loud if you buy foreign items because you are also to blame.
    And this isn’t a dem/repub blame game. They are all to blame…both parties and presidents.

  • Anonymous

    ….and over the years the Dems had control long enough to CHANGE it, but, apparently they were interested in other things, and the middle class got the shaft.  So, maybe you could ask your buddy Obama what he’s doing with all those tariff $$$$$ coming in?

  • Anonymous

    ….and over the years the Dems had control long enough to CHANGE it, but, apparently they were interested in other things, and the middle class got the shaft.  So, maybe you could ask your buddy Obama what he’s doing with all those tariff $$$$$ coming in?

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    Why are people blaming Vietnam for “what happened in Vietnam” in 1965 (1948, if the truth be told) to 1973? Yeah…what a bunch of jerks those Vietnamese were for standing up to a bunch of invaders doing the bidding of corporate America and the Rockefellers (and others). We blew their country to Hell and killed a million plus of them…and we blame them for it??? Blame the greedy slime buckets who sent you there and profited off it and kicked you to the curb when you came back.

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    New Balance is done. Every time you see a newspaper story about a struggling American company in the news it goes under within 6 months……

  • Anonymous

    Raymond,
      I listened to AND voted for Ross Perot in 1992. He’s not going to run in 2012, but another Texan, RON PAUL is!  Please consider voting for him and campaign for him too if you can.

  • Anonymous

    The framework of the Trans-Pacific Partnership was agreed to in 2007 when your buddy, Bush, was President. Obama and his trade negotiators are holding out for Vietnam to improve their labor conditions, among other issues, before agreeing to any trade pact with Vietnam. I’m not sure Obama thinks this is as good a deal as Bush apparently did.

  • Anonymous

    The framework of the Trans-Pacific Partnership was agreed to in 2007 when your buddy, Bush, was President. Obama and his trade negotiators are holding out for Vietnam to improve their labor conditions, among other issues, before agreeing to any trade pact with Vietnam. I’m not sure Obama thinks this is as good a deal as Bush apparently did.

  • Anonymous

    The framework of the Trans-Pacific Partnership was agreed to in 2007 when your buddy, Bush, was President. Obama and his trade negotiators are holding out for Vietnam to improve their labor conditions, among other issues, before agreeing to any trade pact with Vietnam. I’m not sure Obama thinks this is as good a deal as Bush apparently did.

  • Anonymous

    The framework of the Trans-Pacific Partnership was agreed to in 2007 when your buddy, Bush, was President. Obama and his trade negotiators are holding out for Vietnam to improve their labor conditions, among other issues, before agreeing to any trade pact with Vietnam. I’m not sure Obama thinks this is as good a deal as Bush apparently did.

  • Anonymous

    First of all, Bush was never my buddy—I never voted for him.  Second, if Obama doesn’t think this is a good deal, he can stop it dead in the water with a stroke of his pen.  Wait, he must be waiting for the Vietnamese Garment Worker’s Union Local 38 to form before he “makes it official”, right?

  • Anonymous

    The Trans-Pacific  Partnership is not just a US-Vietnam trade pact. It also involves Australia, Chile, Malaysia, Peru, Brunei, New Zealand, Singapore, and Darussalam and regulates trading between all the included nations. So, killing the deal is not quite as simple as you might suggest.

    Frankly, we need a better deal than we have now. In 2010 we exported 3.7 million in goods to Vietnam but imported 14.9. That’s not helping America. But I don’t buy the argument that a deal with Vietnam will help us sell more pulp and computers to them, either. That’s pure folly, with China being a major trading partner of theirs.

    I think we’re basically on the same side in our feelings about the lousy trade deals that this country has negotiated. I was just taking issue with your portrayal of Obama’s role and his stand on tariffs. You are inserting the argument put forth by the lobbyists, Nike and Addidas, to name two, and assuming he is in absolute agreement with them. That, my friend, remains to be seen.

  • Anonymous

    The Republican Party commitment to free trade, like its
    commitment to big government, fiscal irresponsibility, and nation building, is
    the illegitimate offspring of an unholy alliance between the descendents of the
    Rockefeller Republicans who were rejected in favor of Barry Goldwater and Ronald
    Regan and the neo-conservatives who are largely ex-Democrats who could not stand
    the party of George McGovern. The Rockefeller Republicans were internationalist
    promoting free trade as a way to integrate the US into the rest of the
    world.  The neocons retained their
    Democrat inspired comment to free trade as a way to give consumers lower
    prices.  The problem is that the
    tradition of the Republican Party is protection not free trade.

     

    While free traders like to take Ronald Reagan’s words out of
    context for support, by no means could he be considered a free trader.  Reagan was totally unwilling to forfeit
    American jobs to trade.  He used tariffs
    to protect Harley-Davidson.  All the
    foreign car makers providing jobs here for American workers are here due to
    import quotas he started.  Barry
    Goldwater and Prescott Bush voted against John Kennedy’s trade expansion.  Every Republican presidential candidate from
    Abraham Lincoln in 1860 to Alf Landon in 1936 ran on a platform promising trade
    protection.

     

    Ever Republican who won the presidency before Reagan left
    office acted on trade protection. 
    Lincoln said:

     

    “If we purchase a ton
    of steel rails from England for twenty dollars, then we have the rails and
    England the money. But if we buy a ton of steel rails from America for
    twenty-five dollars, then America has the rails and the money
    both.”

     

    Known as the Great Emancipator Lincoln could also be called
    the Great Protector.   He raised
    protective tariffs to near 50 percent. 
    Tariffs stayed high without any of the bad things free trader try to
    scare us with.

     

    William McKinley linked trade
    protection to patriotism saying:

     

    “I would secure the
    American market to the American producer, and I would not hesitate to raise the
    duties whenever necessary to secure this patriotic end.  I would not have an idle man or an idle mill
    or an idle spindle in this country if, by holding exclusively the American
    market, we could keep them employed and running. Every yard of cloth imported
    here makes a demand for one yard less of American fabrication.”

     

    Today the Rockefeller Republicans and the neocons continue to
    support free trade with a U6 unemployment rate of 16 percent.

     

    Teddy Roosevelt moralized, saying:

     

    “Thank God I am not a
    free trader. Pernicious indulgence in the doctrine of free trade seems
    inevitably to produce fatty degeneration of the moral fibre.”

    One can only hope that the Tea Party will cause the
    Republican Party to get back to its roots and once again become a choice, not an
    echo.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=813974026 Chück Smîth

    I’ve worn new Balance shoes before, and they are very good shoes. I wear a size 16, and they are one of the few manufacturers that make big canoe shoes. I don’t need any shoes now, but I’m going to buy a pair tonight to show them some support. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=813974026 Chück Smîth

    I’ve worn new Balance shoes before, and they are very good shoes. I wear a size 16, and they are one of the few manufacturers that make big canoe shoes. I don’t need any shoes now, but I’m going to buy a pair tonight to show them some support. 

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_B6MYUMB47NHIYQD62Q3CTIA7YA Diane Beal

    Look out!  Obama the one man job creating MACHINE is shifting into high gear!
    Prosperity is right around the corner.  November of 2012 to be exact.

  • http://twitter.com/kingboola jamal shabazz

    READ THIS ABOUT NEW BALANCE SHOES

  • Anonymous

    It’s the workers fault that they what to go an get there product made over seas  .

  • Anonymous

    Nancy, did you know that sneakers are made from petroleum?

  • Anonymous

    Why is there always someone like you who can turn a story about shoe production into a political platform. Get over it already!

  • Anonymous

    Why is there always someone like you who can turn a story about shoe production into a political platform. Get over it already!

  • Anonymous

    Why is there always someone like you who can turn a story about shoe production into a political platform. Get over it already!

ADVERTISEMENT | Grow your business

Marketplace Coupons

ADVERTISEMENT | Grow your business