Biden's 'Made In America' Plan Is Bullying Homeowners Off Their Land to Build a Taxpayer-Subsidized Chip Plant
The president has touted a factory jobs boom. In practice, that means forcing people out of their homes to benefit corporate projects that rely on billions of dollars of subsidies.
HD DownloadMichelle Nuzzo-Kelly remembers feeling somewhat bewildered the first time someone called and offered to buy her house out of the blue.
She recalls putting the agent on speaker so he could hear the hammering going on in the background. "That's the sound of a brand new roof being installed," she told him. It was a $10,000 expense—hardly the sort of thing you'd do if you planned to move. That was in September 2020.
But the calls kept coming. Letters followed. They included offers—the first was "a slap in the face," says Nuzzo-Kelly—and it wasn't long before she got fed up with it. "I said, 'stop calling me. My home is not for sale. There's no for-sale sign on my property.'"
Neighbors got the same requests, all at the same time. It wasn't long before she and other residents of Burnet Road, a dead-end strip of asphalt about 10 miles north of Syracuse, New York, were able to piece together a bit of what was happening.
Their homes were adjacent to a chunk of semi-wooded county-owned land, the White Pine Commerce Park, that had for years been proposed as an industrial site. Now, Onondaga County was hoping to enlarge the parcel to make it more attractive to a potential developer.
The county was coming for her home.
A month after the calls started, Nuzzo-Kelly and several of her neighbors attended a public meeting where the rest of the pieces fell into place. That's where they learned that, a year earlier, Onondaga County had been negotiating with the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world's largest maker of computer chips, to build a new fabrication plant—a "fab"—at White Pine. But the TSMC picked a site in Arizona instead, and now County Executive Ryan McMahon was determined not to be spurned again.
"This type of project would have been an amazing project, thousands of jobs, construction jobs, years of work for the trades, thousands of permanent jobs," McMahon reportedly said at that meeting. "We're on the map."
Nuzzo-Kelly came away feeling quite differently. She was shocked to learn that the county had in effect been shopping her home around to prospective developers for more than a year before she knew anything about it. "This was all done secretly behind all of our backs," she tells Reason. "It was just completely shady right from the start."
For more than two years since that initial meeting, she and her neighbors in Clay, New York, have been caught in the middle of an economic development scheme that stretches from Onondaga County all the way to the White House. Last month, that effort culminated in the announcement that Micron, one of the world's largest computer chip manufacturers, would build a factory in Clay. It's a project that draws together President Joe Biden's campaign-ready blather about luring high-tech manufacturing jobs to America with the promise of government handouts, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer's (D–N.Y.) determination to bring some of those heavily-subsidized jobs to his home state, and the calculated ambition of star-struck local officials who seem to wish they were holding office somewhere else.
"On my watch, 'Made in America'…isn't just a slogan. It's a reality," Biden said on October 27 during a speech in Syracuse celebrating the project. "Today's announcement is the latest example of my economic plan at work."
But that economic policy has a dark side. If the alignment of government subsidies and political star power couldn't force the residents of Burnet Road from their homes, the county had the ultimate trump card. It has the power of eminent domain, which the county's industrial development board voted to authorize over a year ago.
The offers to buy Nuzzo-Kelly's home were never really just offers. They were demands backed by a threat to use government power to force her to sell.
"These are our homes," she remembers thinking. "How can somebody come in and threaten to take something that is ours when we don't want to go?"
The Plot
In the days after that October 2020 meeting with county officials, the residents of Burnet Road geared up for a fight. They formed a Facebook group, built a website, started organizing petitions, and sought local media coverage and legal help.
Among those who got involved was Britta Serog, who had grown up at the tail end of Burnet Road and then moved back a decade ago to help her ailing parents. Serog had deep roots here—a grove of towering pine trees behind her house was planted there by her father when she was just a girl. Serog says it is one of her earliest memories. Her parents' ashes are now buried in the front garden.
"This is where I felt the most settled and now I feel the most unsettled here," she says. After planning to have a quiet retirement here and building a hobby woodworking studio into a barn on the property, she plans to stay to the bitter end.
Paul Richer, a co-owner of the Hot House Brewing in nearby Cicerco, New York, was another leader of the resistance. Richer's roots on Burnet Road go even deeper than Serog's. He and his wife, Robin, now live in the charming kit-home bungalow that his parents built in 1954. Next door is the house that his grandfather built in the 1930s. Robin was born just down the road, and the two met when they were teenagers, when Paul was a hired hand on Robin's father's farm. "I was the farm boy who fell in love with the girl next door," he says.
They raised two daughters here on Burnet Road, in a different home near the top of the street by the intersection with the highway, and then moved back to this house once the kids were grown and Paul's parents had passed away. They seem to know the history of every single property and family up and down this mile-long stretch of asphalt.
"It was devastating," Richer says, recalling the letter that he received during the holiday season in 2019 from the real estate company the county had been hired to acquire the homes on Burnet Road. He and Robin had a lot of work done in anticipation of growing old in the house—like putting in a renovated, more easily navigable bathroom, for example.
In light of all that, the offer from the county "was not fair," Richer says. How could it be? The assessed value of their acre of land and nearly-70-year-old house wouldn't capture the true, and subjective, value of this place to Paul and Robin.

So they stayed, defiantly continuing to grow a vegetable garden—when I visited in early October, their kitchen was full of baskets of freshly picked tomatoes from more than a dozen plants, which Paul was preparing to can—and maintaining the yard while the county-owned homes on the street grow more numerous and more unkempt.
The neighborhood wasn't giving up easily, but Onondaga County has had powerful allies in high places.
Due to supply chain issues largely caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the separate problem of escalating tensions between China and Taiwan, top officials in both political parties have fixated on the idea of bringing more computer chip manufacturing into the United States.
Schumer, the top Democrat in the Senate, has been a leading advocate for the campaign, insisting that an expanded American industrial policy for computer chips is both a national security issue and an economic development scheme. During a visit to Syracuse in April 2021, Schumer told reporters that three of the world's leading semiconductor companies were interested in the White Pine site near Clay. "Each one said we were seriously being considered," he said.
A month later, Schumer sweetened the pot. As he reintroduced a proposal to throw more than $50 billion in new corporate welfare at chipmakers in May 2021, Schumer promised that the package would be a "historic investment in the nation's semiconductor industry that will strength [sic] national security and create jobs across Upstate New York."
That proposal eventually became part of the Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors (CHIPS) Act, which passed Congress with broad bipartisan support this year.
"Because of the new law I signed and Chuck designed and delivered, we're turning things way around—around in a very big way," Biden said in his October 27 speech in Syracuse, a campaign-style event where he boasted about creating thousands of new factory jobs.
County officials have seemed awed by the possibilities. "It's nuts," McMahon, a Republican, told a local television station in September. "You're talking to CEOs of companies that you watch on CNBC and then you're taking a call from them."
"We have the electric and gas resources to support a project that would be transformative for the next 30 years," Robert Petrovich, director of the Onondaga County Industrial Development Agency (OCIDA), which is handling the process of buying out the Burnet Road homeowners, told a local paper in August 2021. "We become a different community. We become Austin, Texas, something like that."
And if you believe that the only thing standing in the way of turning the outskirts of Syracuse, New York, into the next Austin are some stubborn homeowners and their pesky property rights, well, the next step is clear.
On August 24, 2021, the OCIDA voted 5–0 to use its eminent domain powers against the residents of Burnet Road who refused to sell their land.
Even though there are still some holdouts, the semiconductor project is beginning to materialize. In October, state and local officials held a press conference to announce that Micron, the world's fourth-largest semiconductor manufacturer, had agreed to build a fab at the White Pine Commerce Park.
The White House issued a statement calling the announcement "another win for America." Later in October, Biden took a trip to Syracuse to celebrate the Micron project in person. He called it "one of the most significant investments in American history."
"This is our Erie Canal moment," Schumer declared, comparing the construction of a single computer chip factory to the construction of the statewide waterway that in the mid-1800s helped transform upstate New York into an economic powerhouse.
"Everyone in this community will benefit," Schumer said. "Everyone."
Well, maybe not everyone.
Shadows of Kelo
What's happening now to the residents of Burnet Road looks a lot like the early stages of the U.S. Supreme Court's most famous case involving eminent domain.
That story began when city officials in New London, Connecticut—another down-on-its-luck postindustrial city that believed a renaissance could be created with the application of government power—tried to seize property in the Fort Trumbull neighborhood. The plan was to turn the land over to a private developer who would build a new corporate headquarters for Pfizer, a major pharmaceutical company. Susette Kelo and some of her neighbors refused to sell. They took the fight all the way to the Supreme Court.
They lost.
"In short, the Kelo decision is one of the most reviled opinions that the Supreme Court has ever handed down," says Bob Belden, an attorney with the Institute for Justice (I.J.), the libertarian law firm that made a name for itself by defending Susette Kelo's little pink house. The 5–4 ruling, according to Belden, "basically says as long as a government is creative enough to come up with a public use or a public purpose, it can take a private person's property and hand it over to another private person."
Eminent domain is, of course, literally permitted by the Constitution. That is, governments have the power to take property, as long as the sellers are given just compensation, for public purposes like the construction of new roads or the flooding of valleys to form reservoirs.
But there is a marked difference between public uses and what happened in New London—and what may soon happen in Clay—where the government seized private land to turn it over to a private developer. Like in Clay, the Pfizer project in New London was supposed to bring a windfall of new jobs and tax revenue to a fiscally beleaguered city, and local officials were willing to do whatever it took to make it happen.
Writing for the majority in the 5–4 decision in Kelo v. City of New London, then-Justice John Paul Stevens argued that courts are not well-positioned to evaluate the "diverse and always evolving needs of a society" and refused to engage in "empirical debates over the wisdom of takings." Constitutionally, it was good enough that the city of New London had "a carefully considered development plan," Stevens wrote, that had passed the muster of various boards and commissions before the eminent domain actions had been approved.
But the idea that the political system, rather than the judicial system, is the proper check on authorities' power to seize property for private development projects runs into immediate practical problems. If all it takes, in effect, is a majority of your neighbors voting to take your land, do your property rights meaningfully exist at all?
"If such 'economic development' takings are for a 'public use,' any taking is, and the court has erased the Public Use Clause from our constitution," wrote Justice Clarence Thomas in his powerful dissent to the Kelo majority. A "vague promise of new jobs and increased tax revenue," Thomas wrote, is not sufficient to consider a project to be for "public use," which he said should be restricted to situations in which the government actually used or gave the public the legal right to use the land in question.
"Any property may now be taken for the benefit of another private party, but the fallout from this decision will not be random," warned then-Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in her own dissenting opinion. "The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process, including large corporations and development firms."

Kelo lost in court and lost her house. But New London lost, too. Plans to redevelop the Trumbull Hill neighborhood fell apart before the ground was broken for the new Pfizer headquarters. For nearly 20 years, the area has been a blighted, empty monument to a failed political scheme. This year, city officials approved plans to use the land for new housing and a new $30 million community center–right in the heart of the community that the city once destroyed.
But the case succeeded in bringing widespread attention to what seemed like an unfair use of state power. In the years after the Kelo ruling, most states rewrote their eminent domain laws to curtail similar takings for private purposes. President George W. Bush signed an executive order in 2006 limiting the federal government's use of eminent domain to situations "benefiting the general public and not merely for the purpose of advancing the economic interest of private parties" that received the land.
Some of those reforms were more robust than others. Notably, however, New York is one of the few states that did not change its laws post-Kelo. That means it is one of the few places where eminent domain can be used as part of what is blatantly a private development scheme.
Eminent domain proceedings aren't happening yet. The vote last year by the OCIDA didn't start the legal process to seize the properties but is probably better thought of as an official warning to Burnet Road's holdouts: Take the deal we offer, or else escalation is coming. The OCIDA did not respond to Reason's requests for an interview.
When it comes, it will happen quickly. New York law allows the targets of an eminent domain action just 10 days to respond after the legal process kicks off. Belden says that I.J. is monitoring what's going on in Clay and plans to intervene if the county initiates eminent domain. For now, though, it's just a waiting game.
"We've been in this limbo for over a year," says Serog, who speculates that the county was rattling the sword of eminent domain in the hopes of clearing out Burnet Road without having to actually go to court. Without, that is, the risk of turning this situation into the next Kelo case.
O'Connor's warning about how the process could be used against those with relatively less political power seems prescient.
"A lot of people have sold because of the threat of eminent domain. It's very difficult to fight," says Serog. "They feel they don't have any choice."
"It's not a fair negotiation," says Belden. He recalls that during the Kelo oral arguments, the city of New London pointed out that many of Kelo's neighbors had voluntarily sold their homes to the city, drawing laughter from the justices and onlookers in the courtroom. "I mean, everybody knows that once you put this threat out there, you're no longer operating on an equal plane."
For Richer, changing New York's eminent domain policies is part of his motivation for continuing to fight.
"I mean, I've got kids, grandkids. Is something like this going to happen to them down the road?" Richer says. "I don't want them to have to go through the stress that we're going through."
The Next Foxconn?
The final stage of the showdown over Burnet Road seems to be approaching quickly.
The October 4 announcement that Micron was coming to Clay was chock full of the usual grandioseness that accompanies such events. The company is promising a massive chip production facility covering more than 2.4 million square feet—the size of about 40 football fields—creating more than 9,000 jobs in Onondaga County and contributing to over 50,000 jobs statewide.
For McMahon, the county executive, the announcement validates his ambitions. "This is a project that many people felt we weren't worthy of, but at the end of the day the greatest memory technology company in the world chose Onondaga County," he said in a statement. "We will make sure that every neighborhood in every corner of the County feels part of this historic and transformational project."

"The future of New York is now beyond imagining," Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul declared at the press conference, calling the Micron deal "the result of an exclusive, almost-never-happens collaboration between the private sector, businesses, labor, our local elected leaders, [and] the state."
But this sort of thing actually happens all the time. Even in New York.
In 2010, for example, the state poured $470 million in subsidies into a deal with then–tech giant Yahoo, which planned to build a data and call center near Buffalo. When the deal was announced, Schumer was on hand to declare it a game-changing moment for the state—just like he's done with the Micron deal.
"This opening says to high-tech companies throughout the world: 'Look at Western New York, see what stuff we have, and you will come here,'" he said.
Five years later, the project had created 200 jobs at a cost of about $2.4 million per job. By 2018, one of the developers was in prison for corruption connected to the deal.
Similarly, a solar energy project near Buffalo that received $750 million in subsidies from the state ended up creating just 700 jobs—a fraction of the 3,000 that then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo had promised when the giveaway was announced. Those subsidies flowed through Empire State Development, the same state entity that is overseeing the giveaway to Micron.
Those are hardly outliers. A 2017 investigation by ProPublica, Columbia University's journalism school, and the Albany-based Investigative Post combed through 16,000 subsidy deals worth billions handed out between 2011–2014 under the oversight of Cuomo. The results were damning.
"The state's substantial investment in the Upstate economy has not yet generated many jobs," the investigation found, adding that Cuomo's "economic development programs suffer from a lack of transparency and objective analysis to determine their effectiveness." The report also found that "the state does an inadequate job of vetting subsidy recipients to determine their history of compliance with federal and state regulators and that some companies have used their influence to tap into a multitude of subsidy programs and place executives on decision-making bodies that help determine how tax breaks and other forms of assistance are awarded."
The Micron project comes with support from the federal government, which might lend a veneer of additional legitimacy to the effort. But recent history suggests that federal support is no guarantee that high-profile industrial policy efforts will succeed. Indeed, the Micron project has parallels not only with the infamous Kelo case, but with what happened on the outskirts of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, a few years ago.
With the help of eminent domain, state and local officials were able to cobble together a parcel of land in Mount Pleasent, Wisconsin, that was sold to Foxconn, which manufactures components for Apple's iPhones and promised to invest $10 billion in Wisconsin. In addition to the land, state officials led by then-Gov. Scott Walker gave Foxconn one of the most lucrative corporate welfare packages in American history.
Wisconsin's Legislative Fiscal Bureau, a number-crunching agency similar to the federal Congressional Budget Office, calculated that it would take until 2043 for Wisconsin to recoup the $3 billion handout, and even if all 13,000 promised jobs went to Wisconsinites, the tab would be more than $230,000 per job created.
But that didn't stop the politicians from celebrating. Then-President Donald Trump jetted to Wisconsin for a ground-breaking photo-op with Walker, and declared that the Foxconn plant would be nothing less than "the eighth wonder of the world."
Fast forward to April 2021. That's when Foxconn told the state that its revised plans for the Mount Pleasant facility would see the company invest about $672 million (instead of $10 billion) and employ about 1,400 workers when completed—a fraction of what was once promised.
The Foxconn project should be a reminder not to judge the effectiveness of economic development schemes by the press releases issued in the days after a construction project is announced. A semiconductor fab is not built in a day.
Unfortunately, the passage of the federal CHIPS Act—which effectively tries to copy Walker's strategy in luring Foxconn to Wisconsin, but does so on a national level—might encourage states to make more bad deals, warns Pat Garofalo, a policy analyst at the left-leaning Center for American Progress and author of The Billionaire Boondoggle, a book criticizing corporate welfare.
The CHIPS Act has kicked off a "Semiconductor Doom Loop," Garofalo warned in a June post on his Substack newsletter, Boondoggle, in which states are now incentivized to compete even more aggressively against one another to land federally subsidized tech manufacturing facilities. Those economic development schemes have always been a "race to the bottom" but are now being pursued with greater speed and fewer safeguards, he argues.
The federal government's pandemic stimulus programs are helping spur the spending binge. Kentucky, Michigan, and Tennessee have used federal funds distributed to the states as part of the American Rescue Plan to subsidize factories for electric vehicles and batteries, for example.
But it isn't clear that all that new spending will advance the goal of boosting American high-tech manufacturing jobs. "The federal government's half-baked plan is goading states into a destructive subsidy competition of their own," Garofalo wrote in Boondoggle in June, "which will result in even more money thrown into a system that already failed."
Meanwhile, governments are flooding these projects with money as computer chip manufacturers are reporting record revenues. The New York Times reported last year that equity investors have "plowed more than $12 billion into 407 chip-related companies" during 2020, which is more than double what they invested in 2019. Revenue for global chip manufacturers was up 10 percent in 2020, despite a pandemic-induced slowdown in demand, the Times reported, and NXP Semiconductors, which makes chips for automobiles and industrial equipment, saw revenue climb by 27 percent. Those numbers don't suggest an industry in dire need of government aid.
Concerns about America's share of global semiconductor manufacturing are similarly misplaced. Much of the justification for these massive new subsidy programs is wrapped up in the idea of national security—that America is somehow at risk if our leaders don't ensure that semiconductors are made here. One oft-repeated talking point highlights how America's share of global semiconductor manufacturing has fallen from 37 percent in 1990 to just 12 percent last year.
But where the chips are made doesn't matter much. According to the Semiconductor Industry Association, a trade group, American-based firms still control 47 percent of the global share of the semiconductor industry—far more than companies based anywhere else. "It is true that America has slipped to a 12 percent market share in semiconductor manufacturing, but it doesn't follow that firms need government help not to slip further," wrote T.J. Rodgers, CEO of Cypress Semiconductor Corporation and a former chairman of the Semiconductor Industry Association, in The Wall Street Journal last year, as the debate over the CHIPS Act heated up in Congress.
Back on Burnet Road, Richer, the local brewery co-owner, wonders about the effectiveness of using public funds to lure companies like Micron to upstate New York, where the tax and regulatory environment has been driving big companies away for years.
"All these big manufacturers left the state because it's just too expensive to do business here," he says. "I just feel that if a big company does come in here, how long are they going to stay? You know, when their benefits package expires and they have to start paying taxes, are they going to stay or …move out of state?"
That's a question that the officials involved should be asking, too. Just days after plans for the new fabrication plant near Syracuse were announced, Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra told Axios that "continued tax credits are needed for sustained investment" and hinted at the company's plans to scale back its investments if the market takes a turn.
In the Pines
A few days before Micron announced its plans to build in Onondaga County, Nuzzo-Kelly locked the front door of her house on Burnet Road for the last time.
"I left there in tears," she says during a phone interview. "Eventually, they're going to bulldoze the homes, and it'll be like Burnet Road never existed."
Despite having been one of the main organizers of the "Save Burnet Road" effort, Nuzzo-Kelly eventually (and reluctantly) struck a deal with the county to sell her home and moved to Baldwinsville, about 30 minutes away. She and her husband have spent the past few months packing up the house on Burnet Road and shuffling their lives into the new home. Though she is not at liberty to discuss the terms of the sale due to a nondisclosure agreement signed as part of the deal, Nuzzo-Kelly says she's happy with the end result—and happy that she decided to sell before the hammer of eminent domain came down—even if the way it all happened still makes her mad.
"It could have been handled much differently," she says. "They came in with the attitude of 'we're going to take it one way or the other, so you might as well make this easy for both of us.'"
"The county has forced people out of their houses," Richer says, bluntly. Even without specifically invoking eminent domain, it's clear to him that most people on the road "didn't move by choice. They had no intention of moving."

That group now includes Richer and his wife, too. In October, a few weeks after the Micron project was announced to much fanfare, Richer and his wife bowed to the pressure and accepted an offer to sell their home.
"This beautiful rural area will undergo many major changes. None of which I want to be a part of," Richer told Reason via email shortly after making the decision to sell. A confidentiality clause in the contract he signed with the country limits what he can say about the deal's terms, but Richer says emotions are running raw for both he and his wife. "There has been anger, tears, and just about every imaginable emotion you can think of. I really don't want to leave, but again, where we live now will not be the same. There is such an emotional attachment to this place. I am feeling a sense of loss, but need to move forward and make the best of it."
It's hard to fault the residents who took the county's offer and moved away. The Micron project is still fraught with legal questions and economic uncertainty, but fighting it means standing up to politicians in Onondaga County, Albany, and Washington, D.C., all of whom have lined up behind the project.
And it means knowing that even if you succeed in saving your own home, much of the damage has already been done.
"It is sad. It is very sad. There was a real good community here," says Serog. Even if the county were to give up, there's no way to get that back. Burnet Road is now a ghost town, dotted with obviously empty and abandoned homes. The siding has been stripped off of some, garage doors and lighting fixtures are missing from others. More than a few have piles of garbage in the front yards—old furniture, drywall, and other detritus not valuable enough to move or steal. Most yards are overgrown with weeds. The empty houses along the road have attracted looters, which has prompted Serog to install some security cameras on her property and only added to the feelings of insecurity.
In a speech after winning the Nobel Prize for economics in 1974, F.A. Hayek advised policy makers "not to shape the results as the craftsman shapes his handiwork, but rather to cultivate a growth by providing the appropriate environment, in the manner in which the gardener does this for his plants."
To carry the metaphor forward, the garden of upstate New York has gone fallow. But rather than cultivating growth across the whole area—say, by cutting taxes, reducing regulations, or engaging in other behaviors like states where economic growth is happening—Onondaga County, with help from Schumer and Biden, is dumping a bunch of fertilizer in one spot, hoping to get a single sprout to grow, and promising a bountiful harvest. Even if they weren't taking a bunch of private property in the process, this would be an ill-advised strategy to cure the region's economic woes.
What's happening on Burnet Road is the most visible, vicious portion of the costs of industrial policy. It is the result of deliberate decisions made by policymakers in Onondaga County, in Albany, and in Washington, D.C., to prioritize the interests of a massive, wealthy corporation over the property rights of the people who already live there. Wrapping it in the trappings of national economic security should not obscure that basic reality.
This is, as Biden put it on October 23, the White House's economic plan at work.
Serog gazes through the gloaming of an early October evening at the grove of pine trees that could soon be bulldozed by Onondaga County. If she's forced out, she says, "I'll survive. It'll be a lot of work."
In the meantime, she will keep her plans to upgrade a nearby rental property on hold. Planned renovations to her own house and the barn that she's converted into a woodworking studio will have to wait, too. But she's still working hard on the garden, ready to harvest this year's supply of sweet potatoes and saffron, waiting on the gourds and the last few berries from her thicket. Out back, the trees are pressed in a bit too close together, huddled up like protesters behind a barricade, ready for a fight they probably can't win.
"I don't think it's fair. I don't think this is a good law that forces people to move out," says Serog. "Taking somebody's private land and giving it to another private company. Is that the government's place? I don't think so."
Camera by Qinling Li; edited by Danielle Thompson; additional graphics by Isaac Reese; audio production by Ian Keyser.
Music Credits: "Waiting" by Laurel Violet via Artlist; "Line" by Oak and Cherry via Artlist; "Cosm" by Amulets via Artlist; "Reverence" by Oliver Michael via Artlist; "Subdivide" by Stanley Gurvich via Artlist; "Woodland" by Laurel Violet via Artlist; "Unsettled" by Matt Stewart-Evans via Artlist; "Future Forests" by Ben McElroy via Artlist; "Sun Up" by Laurel Violet via Artlist.
Photo Credits: Mark Wilson/CNP / Polaris/Newscom; SMG/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Wang Ying / Xinhua News Agency/Newscom; Mike Groll/ Office of Governor Kathy Hochul; Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom; CNP/AdMedia/SIPA/Newscom; Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom; Ron Sachs - Pool via CNP/CNP / Polaris/Newscom; Institute for Justice.
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Definitely not libertarian.
But definitely the most pro-American policy in my lifetime.
Fuck China/Taiwan.
Fuck China/Taiwan.
Onondaga County had been negotiating with the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC).
You are truly stupid.
"You are truly stupid."
You left out dishonest; turd lies. It's what turd does.
What's pro-American about a plan that's bound to fail when the companies they are trying to attract realize how bad the NY regulatory and tax environment is and back out. Or they build the plant and close it when it proves impossible to run at a profit. The end result here will be like Kelo and Poletown: a neighborhood destroyed at great cost to the taxpayers and no lasting gain.
What fucking part of 'no mean tweets' do you not fucking understand Boehm.
It's all worth it for no mean tweets. I mean, for fuck's sake, you people wanted 'wrong, but within normal parameters' - well you fucking got it.
Stop bitching, this is what you voted for.
I know right, Donald wouldn't do this in say Wisconsin with Foxconn. All he did wrong ever was "mean tweet" ( as if that were wrong).
It's different when Trump does it. It's literally Armageddon.
Boehm just needs to shut the fuck up or people will start comparing Orange Man Short Hands with Biden and start asking questions.
It'sallworthitIt'sallworthitIt'sallworthiIt'sallworthitt
This is what happens when I'm late to the party and don't get to sarcastically whine "You can't complain because you wanted this to happen! You voted for Biden! You, you, you! Waaaah!" before someone says the same thing but means it.
Don't whine when the guy you voted for does the thing you voted for him to do and has a 50 year track record of doing.
I miss the days when conservatives shunned ad hominem arguments.
It's obvious you do not know what ad hominem means.
Ad hominem is argument against the person.
Your argument against what the author said is "You voted for Biden so shut the fuck up."
That ignores what the person says, because the argument is against the person, not what they said.
Thus you're making a textbook ad hominem. Something teachers would point their students to as an example.
1. That wasn't an argument.
2. That's not what ad hominem means.
it is a little cute how you've learned to hate.
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Remember when Obama got the feds to build industrial parks across the country? There's one around here. It's where some of my friends go shooting because there's nobody around for miles.
Is that where you and the other hobos go to ‘shoot’ your loads into each other’s orifices?
This is nothing compared to the ginormous land grab thst is coming in conjunction with Biden’s energy clusterfuck.
This is a huge country and they can't find enough empty land to build a factory?
Was thinking the same thing... Maybe all that empty land deosn't come with the same payback for the politicians who hope to gain from it? Naw... too simple, too obvious... I'd bet the list of politicians who retired from major state and national roles is pretty short - I know the ones from my state made out really well!
“It does not matter where the chips are made…”
The last three years in disruptions to the global supply chain due to the COVID pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine rather strain the credibility of that claim. It does indeed matter where stuff is made, and outsourcing to China or territory China is lusting after seems a plan fraught with potential unintended consequences.
That being said, the likelihood of Micron reneging on their promises is high, given Schumer’s and the NYS government’s willingness to be suckers when playing with other people’s money and property. But for them to not be suckered requires them paying some kind of consequences for their bad behavior, and, well, they do not.
You are right, just in the wrong way. Because during pandemic I could not get anything made in America. I could get Chinese shit. I tried buying a new gym system, and the nice people in Minnesota wanting to sell it to me were unfortunately locked out of their factory by the nannies. Made in America didn't work. Diverse, global supply chains did.
Indeed, I can't help but chuckle every time people look at the forced shutdown of 1/3 of the global economy as some sort of indictment of global trade. Last I checked, other than some TP shortages, nobody in the country starved for lack of food. 100 years earlier, none of that would have been possible.
I think you are right, as in correct. Doing business with despotic aggressive states is virtual suicidal, i.e. the likes of China, Russia, Iran, N. Korea. Years ago I used semiconductors from N. Korea strangely enough – TI made the same and they were available at only slightly higher prices, so yes they do export something other than terror.
So he is "right, as in correct" that dependence on foreign goods disrupted our supply chains during pandemic (which is wrong), because you don't like trading with "bad" countries. Interesting.
Crony-Socialism strikes again.
Why get into government if you can't bully the citizenry?
It's "Cicero" not "Cicerco".
Full disclosure: I don’t bother reading the articles anymore; I just like to argue, I guess, because common sense is in such short supply, as are good manners, class and decency. If we lose those things, the chip factory and/or property rights isn’t much going to make up for what we’ve lost. I guess it’s radical these days to support these ancient practices, but the alternative is raising out kids as participants in a reality show. An an afterthought, the rights that the founding fathers wanted to protect presupposed a modicum of community desire to identify themselves first as Americans working together for a cause. Absent that presupposition, the quest for individual rights loses its context, possibly causing unintended harm rather than help. Just my two cents… I’m just killing time waiting for a back X-ray. Time marches on…
I have close family in Syracuse and have spent quite a large amount of time there. IF Micron ever opens their plant at the capacity they promised, they will regret it.
I would never choose to live there.
If you look closely at the three grinning mugs in that politicians' shot, you will be able to see the tiny yellow feathers around the corners of those straining to grin maws, and a few more sticking out from between their yellow teeth.
Yup the cats definitely got the canary.
The US Costitution assigns, amongst other tasks, to Federal Government the job of "promoting the general welfare". That does NOT mean certain things. it does NOT mean doling out welfare checks to large numbers of non-working people. Nor does it mean to give large (no far larger than that number) sums of money in kind and in exchange (tax breaks, pulling back burdensome regulations, etc) to private enterprises on the off chance that somehow, someday, some locals might get a paycheck or three.
FedGov have NO BUSINESS subsidising private enterprise. This whole boondoggle is an example of FedGov (along with Hoe-Tchyool) playing sugar daddy to selected favourite actors. I can't help but wonder how large a kickback that Biden sprog will be getting on its way to bolstering the Biden clan's fortunes somehow somewhere.
I had not finished reading the first line before I thought of Kelo.
IF it does go to that, I hope the then judges will pay close attention to the dissents rendered in Kelo, along with the history of how things played out after that disgusting "decisio" to favour the crones in power there in Massachussetts. This is more crooked than a lame dog's hind leg.
But the enumerated power of Congress to pay for "internal improvements" set us down that slippery slope.
Problems that I see:
• Why this particular tract? As if New York just naturally lacks the infrastructure to supply such as electricity & natural gas.
• Someone does benefit from the deal. Perhaps someone in politics.
• Private business should ideally be consulted to identify multiple prospects. The concerned public should have a chance to assist in the process. This is their national infrastructure, after all
• People should assess independently whether anything could go wrong with the choice of location. Does it ever see tornadoes or hurricanes, for example, or earthquakes? Does flooding occur? How about sinkholes?
• The best defense is a good offense. A public campaign to favor another site that has a better chance of popular acceptance could be popular. If you want to politic by using eminent domain, a strong party action could retort with a much better, more compelling deal elsewhere.
• A court may not had been consulted, but can a court issue an injunction based upon a known local risk?
"Does it ever see tornadoes or hurricanes, for example, or earthquakes? Does flooding occur? How about sinkholes?" I don't know of anything like that in Syracuse, but what you can rely on every year is some of the worst winter weather in the 48 states. Good luck attracting techies from California...
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It's been two years (September 2020 to November 2022) since the Burnet Road homeowners learned of the county's plans – yet the same officials – County Executive Ryan McMahon and the five members of the Onondaga County Industrial Development Agency – are still in office, voted in by the residents of the county.
Mr. Boehm writes, “If all it takes, in effect, is a majority of your neighbors voting to take your land, do your property rights meaningfully exist at all?” That “all”, a majority, is what, in this case, governs Onondaga County.
Beyond everything else, why in the hell are they building in shithole NY state? Was Illinois not available?
Low land costs and better educated workforce. Lower crime rates than most Republican states, too.
Republican states have been luring businesses with tax breaks and help at getting sites for a generation. Now that a Democrat actually does the same thing, there is outrage.
That's hilarious, lefty shit.
Hey, Eric! Who'd you vote for again?
I work in the semiconductor industry, and I hate the CHIPS Act and Biden's idiotic export rule that dicked with working in or on semiconductor projects for China.
EAD, Brandon.
Joe Biden's America!
With pedo Joe and little Chuckie Schumer involved, the odds of grift being involved are approximately 100%.
The poor people of that county are going to get steamrolled, most of them will end up living in a rental unit in one of the poorer sections of the neighborhood and their lives will be changed forever.
We've had the same thing happen up here in northern Michigan where I live. TI built a plant in the 1960s and then closed it a few decades later. The same with another company out of Detroit. That plant was torn down. The old TI plant building has changed hands several times and I don't know who the hell owns it now.
Our town is dying a slow miserable death. Young people are leaving as fast as they can and now only retirees remain.
The CHIPS Act Is Biden Corporate Fascism Disguised as Industrial Policy
comments closed!
The law of unintended consequences will never be tamed. It is not political, it affects both side.
Looking over these old comments, almost all are just irrelevant.
Intel shares slump 26% as turnaround struggle deepens
Pump billinos into the economy and you destroy the economy -- of course. EVs are doing TERRIBLY, Biden completely destroyed the market..subsidies to producers and buyers and bullying out the competion. So what predictably happens ( unless you are an MMT nutter) BBC admits the EV market is ‘collapsing’
Trump opposed the most anti-China trade deal in history - the TPP.
He is fine with Chinese theft of our IP. He sucked on China policy.
Unreal
Sadly, Clinton and Sanders also opposed the TPP. Biden was one of the few Democrats who didn't cave to the idiots. One more example where he is right and everyone else is wrong.
https://www.cato.org/commentary/tpp-rip
Cato strongly supported the TPP.
Then Fatass Donnie shit on America.
Fatass Donnie is a Shit on America First conservative.
The TPP offers the last best chance to achieve a fresh round of comprehensive global trade liberalization under U.S. leadership. It reasserts the primacy of the rule of law in trade and expands its coverage to aspects of global commerce that didn’t even exist when the current rules were last updated, 22 years ago. As an agreement that includes countries on four continents and is open to new members that qualify, the TPP could evolve into a vehicle for achieving a much more broad‐based round of multilateral trade liberalization. Economies accounting for nearly 40 percent of global output and one‐third of trade are among the TPP’s charter members, so the deal has achieved critical mass. That heft allows the TPP’s terms to be offered to prospective new members on a take‐it‐or‐leave‐it basis. If regional investment shifts from TPP nonmembers to TPP members, the incentive to join the agreement would only grow. Many countries, including Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan, and Thailand, have already expressed interest in joining and have begun to undertake the domestic reforms necessary to qualify for the TPP.
Cato
Talk about projection. Some of us oppose protectionism. Period.
Unlike people such as yourself who defend it when your guy is in power, and then manage to find your principles once he's out of office.
Did that make you feel better about yourself? Did it boost your fragile ego? Do you feel that you tore me down a notch in order to lift yourself up?
Sorry dude, but the only people you impressed were your fellow trolls. Losers like you whose lives are so miserable that the only way they can feel good is by saying things on the internet that would get them a sound beating in real life.
I pity you. I truly do.
Sarc sure is protective of his pedophile pal, isn’t he?
You should either speed up your impending liver failure or get clean and get some fucking counseling. I really don’t care either way.
We’ve all had more than enough of your bullshit.
That not fair. Those are figments of his booze fueled delusions. I don’t believe for a moment they exist.
Some of us do. Shrike is obviously not one of them so I’m not sure why you jumped in here.
Do you fantasize about Trump pounding your ass while you’re balls deep in another prepubescent child? It wouldn’t surprise me.