Aaron Slodov’s Post

awesome coverage of NAIA launch by Forbes and David Jeans. silicon valley is lining up to help. the industrial base of today will be unrecognizable in 20 years, with the added bonus of securing our nation's future.

View profile for Austin Bishop, graphic

Quant, Investor, neo-industrialist.

The American people are ready for a return to greatness—rebuilding industry, recovering jobs, and revitalizing the heartland. We founded New American Industrial Alliance because we share this vision of American greatness, and know now is the time to enact it. America's industrial decline has been well documented. Growing up in Cleveland, I lived it. But the tides have shifted. President Trump blew the Overton Window on trade wide open. Elon Musk reminded people we can still build incredible things. People from both sides of the aisle are realizing we made a mistake deindustrializing our country. We founded NAIA to unite the builders—the men and women in the arena, spending the time, energy, and capital to build in America and for America. Thank you, David Jeans and Forbes, for giving us and our members the chance to share our vision. https://lnkd.in/eb5_UD2b

Trump Wants Manufacturing Jobs Back. Silicon Valley Is Lining Up To Help

Trump Wants Manufacturing Jobs Back. Silicon Valley Is Lining Up To Help

social-www.forbes.com

Jordan Rice

Technology Executive Scaling Complex Products, Teams, and Operations Globally

2d

I wish it were this easy...we havent graduated enough of any of the technical disciplines required to do this for decades upon decades. You cant bring this base back while simultaneously hollowing out and politicizing education, and without drastically changing the amount of immigration allowed annually. Even legal immigration was at an all-time low under Trump 1.0. Something else will have to give, and even then its a decades long task of educating and training the required workforce.

Danny Andreev

On a mission to kickstart the lunar economy. Hardware | Robotics | Manufacturing | Founder & Entrepreneur | Mentor | Angel Investor | Sponsored Athlete

2d

I am stoked to surf this wave! I was just speaking with a recruiting firm about space industry need and they said the #1 hardest thing to hire for (in aero-engineering) is EE, specifically in FPGA. I was reminded of my time at school where I was one of ~16 EE graduates my year and the CS dept had over 500 CS grads. I wonder how we are gonna meet the hardware engineering demand, cause most EEs I work with are substantially older and aging out of the workforce.

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