It's truly sad to me that our great American companies don't feel that they can be competitive w/o shopping out the parts & labor.
aaaargh. spyder
It's not just manufacturing jobs either, but tech jobs too. For a long time, we've been exporting blue-collar assembly jobs, but now, white-collar jobs are going away too. Personally, I have been chased out my last two software development jobs by outsourcing to India. I'm starting a new job in two weeks because everything I was working on now is being developed and maintained in Mumbai. It's a very short-sighted proposition.
What are we saying to the geeky kids that would major in computer science degrees at Georgia Tech or other good engineering schools? For years, you graduate with a CS degree and you build software for a couple of years before moving on. Now, these kids won't be able to get a job unless they're ready to work for what the Indians on the H1-B visas are working for, and that ain't much.
Where does it end? A lot of X-rays are read in India. We all know how well shipping customer support to India has worked out. It ain't pretty, and until the companies, like the world's largest soft drink maker, wakes up and sees the negative long term impact of their cost hunting and lowest cost proposals, the only jobs left in America will be for those wearing mesh hats and plastic name tags.

