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United States Intel Politics

Trump and Chip Makers Including Intel Seek Semiconductor Self-Sufficiency (wsj.com) 77

The Trump administration and semiconductor companies are looking to jump-start development of new chip factories in the U.S. as concern grows about reliance on Asia as a source of critical technology. From a report: A new crop of cutting-edge chip factories in the U.S. would reshape the industry and mark a U-turn after decades of expansion into Asia by many American companies eager to reap investment incentives and take part in a robust regional supply chain. The coronavirus pandemic has underscored longstanding concern by U.S. officials and executives about protecting global supply chains from disruption. Administration officials say they are particularly concerned about reliance on Taiwan, the self-governing island China claims as its own, and the home of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's largest contract chip manufacturer and one of only three companies capable of making the fastest, most-cutting-edge chips.

Trump administration officials are in talks with Intel Corp., the largest American chip maker, and with TSMC, to build factories in the U.S., according to correspondence viewed by The Wall Street Journal and people familiar with the discussions. "We're very serious about this," said Greg Slater, Intel's vice president of policy and technical affairs. Mr. Slater said Intel's plan would be to operate a plant that could provide advanced chips securely for both the government and other customers.

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Trump and Chip Makers Including Intel Seek Semiconductor Self-Sufficiency

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  • This was already posted....YESTERDAY

    Read your own damn front page before posting articles.

  • This is the right way to bring manufacturing jobs to the U.S. I'm sure they'll find some way to completely screw it up though...

    • Oh... don't worry... it will definitely not be screwed up. I say that with complete seriousness. Too often folks keep thinking that government is screwing something up when they fail to realize that for the most part... what was intended is exactly what happened. You view it as a screw up because people keep buying into the following farce...

      "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." ~Hanlon's razor

      The problem with this law is that it invokes "never"

      There are TEAMS o

      • Promising things about the future and can't control. This is why we love little MrAstray.

        • Predicting the corruption of politicians and the stupidity of voters is no Olympian feat.

          People here constantly bitch about the corruption of the politicians and the stupidity of voters, but once I say something about it you start acting as though corruption and stupidity are not that common. So which is it? Are politicians not as corrupt as many here suggest or are Voters not as stupid as many here suggest?

          Have you thought about how stupid you look right about now?

          I look at human history and it looks lik

          • I haven't made any predictions though, Mr Astray.

            You are funny when you know your "arguments" are called out.

            • ...you calling me out is the same as a prediction that I am wrong.

              Sorry you lack the intelligence to figure these things out. But nice try, trying to avoid looking stupid. You can't even follow your own name well, but at least you have something to aspire too.

              Though I suspect avoiding any responsibility or logic are your primary namesakes... amiright?

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        If the wealthy are stepping back from globalism, I for one welcome our new local-manufacturing overlords, at least for stuff consumed in the US.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by RobinH ( 124750 )
      I don't think so. The "right" way is to acknowledge the fundamental source of the problem, which is environmental protection worker's rights, and intellectual property protection over here in North America, and almost none of that in China. We used to fix that by adding a tariff to goods imported from countries like that to make it a level playing field, but then someone decided "free trade" = "good" ignoring all these details. Sure, free trade between Canada and the US is great because the two countries
  • Even with the small scale intel production here it hasn't made sense that they don't do this for decades now.

    Strategically it is crucial to have this infrastructure and we have all the federal lands in the world we can dedicate to this along with plenty of subsidies we no longer need on oil to shift. Imagine a world where the chip fabs speak English with an easily understood american dialect and accent and don't have issues every rainy season or Tsunami or other weather related event.

    Hell build a giant arti

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @10:49AM (#60048026)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • That would be like the Nazis invading Poland.... I don't think even China wants to go there.
        • maybe Sudetenland .....
          • by DesScorp ( 410532 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @11:34AM (#60048342) Journal

            maybe Sudetenland .....

            This is a pretty good analogy. The Sudetenland was ethnically German, and that gave Hitler the cover he needed. China has always seen Taiwan as a renegade province filled with rebellious Mandarin-speaking Chinese people. I don't think anyone would be willing to go to war to stop them. Many of the world's powers outside of the US agrees with China and sees it as an essentially internal matter.

            • Re:Sudetenland (Score:5, Insightful)

              by gtall ( 79522 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @11:48AM (#60048426)

              You mean the CCP has always seen Taiwan as a renegade province right after Chiang Kai-Shek moved there after Mao let him exhaust his troops against that Japanese so the CCP could pick over the carcass.

              The problem for the CCP is they are a party running an illegitimate government. No one should see them as anything but. The CCP needs to capture Taiwan to show that nothing can resist the ineptitude of the CCP.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by mi ( 197448 )

          That would be like the Nazis invading Poland... I don't think even China wants to go there.

          If they do it with Biden in the White House, America just might let them get away with it — as we did allow Russia to have its way with Ukraine [theoaklandpress.com] during the previous time Biden (the Foreign [nytimes.com] Policy [nytimes.com] Expert [washingtontimes.com]) was in the White House.

          And it was just as predictable [independent.co.uk] too...

      • Ask yourself this. If China were to just take Taiwan, who would stop them? Who would risk doing so?

        If global semiconductor manufacturing is impacted then the following people will stop them:

        1) China's Enemies
        2) China's Neutral partners
        3) China's Allies

        Make no mistake, Trump's little trade war temper tantrum will look like two siblings arguing about who gets to play with the new toy first in comparison. China is absolutely not at all happy with the state of Taiwan, they haven't been happy for many years, but unlike some leaders in the world their country is run by people intelligent enough to know that th

  • Long overdue (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bblb ( 5508872 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @10:48AM (#60048020)

    Moves like this are long overdue and it's a shame that it took coronavirus induced shortages for people to realize that Trump's push for a return to domestic manufacturing wasn't some xenphobic appeal to nationalism but rather an obvious necessity for any nation's security and independence. Globalism is great for producing cheap shit and outsourcing your pollution but we've seen the flip side of that come back to bite us. Better late than never but this is long overdue.

    • wasn't some xenophobic appeal to nationalism but rather an obvious necessity for any nation's security and independence

      Hold on a second. There is the time-honored economic concept of "comparative advantage". A region specializes in something and thus does it better on average than trying to distribute it all over. Silicon Valley's advantage is that cutting-edge experts from all over the world can found in the same town, making it easy to put together a team for new projects. It's the same with physical chip

      • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @11:53AM (#60048454)

        There is the time-honored economic concept of "comparative advantage". A region specializes in something and thus does it better on average than trying to distribute it all over.

        The theory assumed a fair market. An absence of artificial barriers between traders. We don't have such trade with China.

        • by jpapon ( 1877296 )
          Well we're talking about Taiwan here sooooo
        • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

          The theory assumed a fair market.

          Oddly enough, it didn't. Even if one side cheated, models generally showed a net benefit even for the non-cheaters. (I'll try to find a link.)

          However, it should be pointed out the benefits and downsides may not be even, such as hurting specific careers or towns.

          • by drnb ( 2434720 )
            I think competitive advantage required free trade, and free trade required unrestricted imports and exports. By fair trade I meant free trade.
    • by jwymanm ( 627857 )
      Our previous administration stared at the screen and told our citizens that the jobs were not coming back. Word for word they said those jobs are not coming back. "Learn to code." And people loved it. If Trump is gone next 4 years it's likely we'll return to China servitude and people will still love it. I say this even if a different Republican got the job. Trump has been unique in the platform he ran on (bring jobs back). Nobody seems to care that is what he ran on primarily.
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      BS. The only reason Trump is pushing it is because he thinks it will get him elected. He doesn't give a flying rat's ass about domestic production otherwise. I cannot think of a more ill-equipped administration to shepherd such a policy. He'll only screw it up like he does everything else. The R's will go along as long as their fat cats get properly greased.

    • Intel already has foundries in the US. They are not used by their competitors like AMD and NVidia and Samsung for a variety of reasons. Currently one major reason is that TSMC is putting out 7nm products in large numbers while Intel is struggling with their processes. For any military or security sensitive chips, I understood that they must be made in the US and is supplied by US companies like TI and IBM.

    • by lorinc ( 2470890 )

      Moves like this are long overdue and it's a shame that it took coronavirus induced shortages for people to realize that Trump's push for a return to domestic manufacturing wasn't some xenphobic appeal to nationalism but rather an obvious necessity for any nation's security and independence. Globalism is great for producing cheap shit and outsourcing your pollution but we've seen the flip side of that come back to bite us. Better late than never but this is long overdue.

      Of course it is. Trump is a xenophobic nationalist. That does not mean that all he ever does is wrong. A broken clock, twice a day, blabla.

      Of course bringing back domestic production is good. It's good for independence purposes, it's good for the environment, etc. However, prepare yourself to lower your quality of living. Because all that you ever profited from for the past 40 years comes from undercovered slavery in Asia. If it wasn't for the kids sewing your shoes and the women screwing your appliance for

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Xenna ( 37238 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @11:03AM (#60048104)

    That should be no problem, Americans are very good at duplication [slashdot.org]!

    • That should be no problem, Americans are very good at duplication [slashdot.org]!

      "Trump and Chip Makers Including Intel Seek Semiconductor Self-Sufficiency"

      "Slashdot seeks anti-Dupe techniques"

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @11:22AM (#60048248) Journal

    I remember when most conservatives called such moves "protectionism", "gov't meddling", and "socialism". Now a good many switched opinions after all the pundits and talking heads push the GOP Agenda of the Moment, namely nationalism. China's cheated for decades*, but most conservatives didn't used to care. The rust belt was considered just another sacrificial lamb to the wheels of capitalism and change: "creative destruction". However, the issue played a large part in getting a GOP president elected, so now it's a GOP standard. Similar with deficits; it used to be important to them, but not since 2017.

    I suppose partisans on both sides tend to rally behind the cause of the moment, such as wall/anti-wall flipping per Democrats, but at least admit your fellow partisans are doing it when caught.

    * Their migrant workforce has very little practical rights and treated like second-class citizens.

  • In practice, after imports have been banned "because of reasons", it means no escape from the domestic spying and total information manipulation necessary to erect a fourth Reich.
    And isn't that something that certain types would like to see...

    Btw: The NSA do have their own large fab for obvious reasons. So aren't they already self-sufficient?

  • by ChrisMaple ( 607946 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @12:10PM (#60048534)
    Packagers need to be in U.S. also. Without packagers, wafer manufacturers are just providing expensive Frisbees.
  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @01:04PM (#60048796) Journal
    that many of these Chinese and their families that moved there escape the brutal communist (Mao was horrible), still consider themselves to be Chinese, not Taiwanese. OTOH, TRUE Taiwan natives do NOT consider themselves as Chinese. That means unless you know the difference in family history, you could be hiring a Chinese spy, when you think that you have a freedom-loving Taiwanese.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      that many of these Chinese ...still consider themselves to be Chinese, not Taiwanese.

      Yeah, as long as by "many", you mean 3.6%. [wikipedia.org]

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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