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United States government wants to create tech hubs across the country

(Photo Supplied/Pixabay)

The United States government wants to create 20 tech hubs across the country, which will come with high-paying jobs and likely will be inviting to other businesses. Purdue University may be a potential candidate, being the first university to offer a semi-conductor degree and with two-thirds of its students studying technology.

“Remarkable leadership across the board in making sure here at Purdue that the United States remains the great technology leader across the world,” said U.S. Sec. of State Anthony Blinken, in a visit to Purdue last week.

Also there was U.S. Sec. of Commerce Gina Raimondo.

“The opportunity to create hundreds of thousands of high-paying jobs in the semi conductor industry all over America, including in the heartland, right here in Indiana,” remarked Raimondo. “And Purdue, what’s happening here is at the center of that.”

The “Chips Act” will allow new development, which Purdue President Mitch Daniels said the university is ready to be a part of.

While chips will be manufactured at SkyWater Technology in Minnesota, the company signed an agreement with Purdue to partner to build a $1.8 billion support facility in West Lafayette.

“We feel profoundly our responsibility to turn out as many high-class new talents for this state and nation as we can, to contribute to the economic vitality of state and nation,” he said on the day of the visit, adding that several companies were scouting the area that day.

Daniels told Inside Indiana Business that Purdue has a special opportunity and responsibility to lead the way in the new technology.

“People describe semi-conductors as the oil of the next economy or the one we’ve entered,” he said. “So, if we can be as the secretaries believes, and as I have believed, a home for much of that, this would be a whole new era of jobs and economic hope for our state.”

While the secretaries visit was to tour the labs and facilities at Purdue, they are on a larger mission to determine the homes for the coming technology hubs.

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2 comments

Charles U Farley September 20, 2022 at 2:37 pm

Tech companies didn’t flee our shores because of lack of leadership or lack of government sponsored tech hubs. Tech companies fled because of an irrational regulatory environment and the punitive taxes required to pay for socialist welfare programs and boondoggles like government sponsored tech hubs.

If the government wants companies to exist in the USA they need to trim regulations and stop wasting money so that taxes can be lowered. “Tech hubs” are not the solution, they are a symptom of the cause.

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Slacker06 September 20, 2022 at 5:41 pm

Please cite for me the exact place int he US Constitution where the federal government can create “Tech Hubs?” The enumerated power of congress are found in Article I, Section 8 of that document. Go read it and see if tech hubs are mentioned. But more likely than not our stooge congress-lizards will vote for it despite it being illegal. No one ever goes after the fact and sees if the big spending actually has the desired effect.

Is Toad Young listening? How about Mikey Braun? Are they abiding by their sacred oath of office to follow the US Constitution?

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