Manufacturing Our Way to Success

The world’s most successful civilizations have been built on the strength of their exports.

Brian G. Schuster
8 min readFeb 13, 2017

In an era when screens have become central to our lives, it can be challenging to divert attention away from Google, Facebook, and Snapchat to look at what comes next. Are cloud computing and mobile apps the only things that matter? In Silicon Valley, where tech startups are prized above all else, the answer certainly seems to be ‘yes.’

A huge part of Silicon Valley-style innovation consists of companies that enable people to thrive without traditional human connections. Airbnb allows you to live away from home without ever settling into a permanent community; Facebook allows you to keep up with friends without ever seeing them or talking to them; Google allows you to find answers without asking people questions; and Amazon allows you to buy everything you need without interacting with a single person.

Perhaps the modern lack of interdependence is a blessing, but maybe innovation goes deeper than distancing people from each other.

If we look beyond the San Francisco Bay Area, we can see artifacts of a time when there was more to life than laptops and cell phones: Detroit’s auto factories, Pittsburgh’s steel mills, Chicago’s printing presses, North Carolina’s furniture plants, and much more. These manufacturing centers aren’t coming back in their old form, and there’s no reason to try to bring them back.

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Brian G. Schuster

Student of the world. NC State / Stanford. Building Cropify.org to connect clean local farmers with busy professionals.