Re: Martin Guitars No Longer "Made in USA"
Now, the California court, in the Leatherman case and the Lifetime backboards case, has further tightened the definition to "any article, unit, or part thereof," has to be "entirely or substantially made, manufactured, or produced" in the U.S.
According to the Music Trades editorial, that means "100% of every piece of every part in a product must be made in one of the 50 states."
Ok, was it an editorial piece that drew the conclusion that 100% of every part of every piece has to be made in the United States, and NOT the Supreme Court of California's interpretation of the ruling? I'm confused. Someone is going to get hated on, and I'd like to know I've got the correct target. If it was an editor, I'd like to know ask how this moron drew that conclusion. If it's how the SC of CA interpreted the ruling, I want to know, in great detail, how they derive "and" from "or" with regards to "entirely or substantially". It's one OR the other, not both. One cannot be both wet and dry, or on fire and not on fire, or moving North and South at the same time, or round and square.
Finally, please keep the politics out of this discussion.
This sort of thing cannot be brought up in conversation without it being about politics, though. It's the prime motivation behind it, and the root cause of the problem.
This is starting to sound more and more like someone in California is butt-hurt over the whole "Made in the U.S.A. means top of the line, better than everyone else" concept. Perhaps they're of Chinese or Central/South American or even Indonesian ancestry, and they hear "oh look, more <insert foreign country> crap" every time they turn around. I'm all for truth in labeling, but this sounds like a contrived plot to get everyone to change their labels to "made on Planet Earth". Once that goes global, you won't be able to tell Made in USA from Made in China, even in the prices, unless you research the branding. However, look for those restrictions to be struck down by the same groups, citing unfair competition because Gibson won't let The People's Guitar Factory #12 sell their knock-offs with a Gibson logo.
Once that spreads, you'll have to drive down to Seymour Duncan HQ and buy one direct from the factory because your local dealer could be stocking foreign counterfeits with legally-sanctioned branding.
But I suggest these companies start pushing back now, and push further to have the ambulance-chasers who brought this to the court disbarred, and the judges who approved it recalled.