
U603 Hose
Transfer gasoline,kerosene,diesel from fuel dispenser to vehicle.
Materials:
Body: oil-proof rubber
Features :
Oil-proof
Hose is soft,light
Little variant when transfer gasoline
Middle conducting layer- working safety
100% Factory Tested.
Package:
Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
31kg/case of 30 34kg/case of 30 37x23.5x19.5 cm / case of 30
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
osedly uncontroversial bill to approve permanent normal trading
relations with Vietnam failed to gain enough votes for passage before Mr Bush s trip to Hanoi last week.
And even the Democratic Party s centrist presidential hopefuls are joining the fray. Barack Obama, for
instance, formally jumped on the Wal-Mart-bashing bandwagon last week (see article).
So is America headed for a bout of protectionist class warfare? History might suggest not. After all,
recent politicians have often flirted with populist themes of the sort William Jennings Bryan (pictured
above) once promoted, from Ross Perot s rants against the “giant sucking sound�of jobs lost to Mexico in
1992 to John Kerry s attacks on “Benedict Arnold�firms in 2004, without much actually happening.
Yet this year seems different. Not only are the new Democratic lawmakers distinctly more protectionist
than the politicians they replaced, but their trade-scepticism was important to voters. An analysis of
voters in 50 competitive districts by Stanley Greenberg, a pollster, showed that Republicans support of
trade was one of the main factors that put off swing voters. Almost 70% of voters want the government
to “protect jobs and ensure that trade is fair�rather than promote free trade.
Go beyond the protectionism, however, and Americans are less conv fuel dispenser inced by populist politics. In Mr
Greenberg s polls voters preferred limited government and low taxes over a government that creates
conditions “so that many can prosper, not just a fuel dispenser few� Douglas Schoen, another Democratic pollster,
finds scant support for economic redistribution. Even amongst poorer Americans, large majorities prefer
policies that boost economic growth to those that redistribute wealth.
This combination of scepticism about trade without any great enthusiasm for class warfare is awkward for
the party s internal politics. Left-wing Democrats have long bashed both trade and business, while the
Clintonite centrists have embraced both. The contours of Democra fuel dispenser