Thefarmersdog
The Farmer's Dog

Published: March 6, 2026
Video Description
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Chapter
00:00 Start Here
01:40 Chapter 1: The Factory Jobs Nobody Talks About
03:02 Chapter 2: The Desperate Hands Behind the Machines
06:20 Chapter 3: How Factories Became ‘Good Jobs’
09:17 Chapter 4: The Manufacturing Jobs We All Point To
11:25 Chapter 5: The Rise of Automation
12:39 Chapter 6: The End of the Monopoly
14:25 Chapter 7: The Decline of Organized Labor
16:23 Chapter 8: The Birth of the Modern Economy
17:51 Chapter 9: Manufacturing in the Modern Economy
20:00 Chapter 10: Where Do We Go From Here
For decades Americans have heard the same promise. We are going to bring the factories back. We are going to bring the jobs back. Manufacturing will return and rebuild the middle class.
But the real story of factory jobs in America is far more complicated.
In this video we explore the full history of manufacturing and how factory work became the backbone of the American middle class before slowly disappearing. We go back to the early days of industrialization when factory work was dangerous, exploitative, and often performed by immigrants and even children. From there we look at the rise of unions, the labor movements that fought for better wages and working conditions, and the moment factory jobs finally became some of the best jobs in the United States.
Then the story changes.
Automation, globalization, foreign competition, and the decline of organized labor transformed the American economy. Companies began moving production overseas while technology reduced the number of workers needed inside factories. At the same time the economy itself began to shift away from production and toward finance, capital markets, and shareholder value.
Today America still manufactures enormous amounts of goods. In fact the United States is one of the largest manufacturing economies in the world. But the factories of today look very different from the factories of the past. Modern factories are highly automated, require fewer workers, and rely on highly skilled technicians, engineers, and specialized labor.
That means even if factories return to the United States, they will not recreate the mass middle class factory jobs of the 1950s.