For the past 30 years, U.S. corporations raked in obscene profits by offshoring manufacturing. According to Jack Ma, the founder of Alibaba, these profits eclipsed those of China’s four largest banks combined.
And yet, America is falling apart.
Where did the money go?
It didn’t rebuild bridges. It didn’t fix schools. It didn’t help the workers who lost their jobs to automation, outsourcing, or Wall Street’s whims.
Instead, $14.2 trillion was burned in meaningless wars. The rest? Fattened the bloated stomach of Wall Street—the most extractive, parasitic force in modern capitalism.
This wasn’t a case of bad management. It was betrayal by design.
And nobody put it more clearly than Jack Ma in a brutally honest interview that American leaders should be forced to watch on loop:
“All that the Americans said, we just want to control the IP, we just want the technology, we just want the brand and leave the lower energy up for the world. Great strategy.
Past 30 years, IBM, Cisco, Microsoft—they made tons of money. The money, the profit they made are much more than the four largest banks in China. But where did the money go?
Past 30 years, the Americans had 13 wars, spending $14.2 trillion. The money going there.
What if they spent a part of that money on building up the infrastructure, helping the white collars and blue collars? No matter how strategic good it is, you are supposed to spend money on your own people.
And the other money, which I am curious about, is that when I was young I heard about America is about Ford, Ford, Boeing—those big manufacturing companies. The last 10–20 years I heard about Silicon Valley and Wall Street. The money goes to the Wall Street.
And what happened? Year 2008. The financial crisis wiped out $19.2 trillion USD alone. They wiped out all the white collars and destroyed 34 million jobs globally.
So what if the money is not in the Wall Street? What if the money spent on the Middle East—sorry, Middle West—of the United States, developing the industry there? That could be changed a lot.
So it's not the other countries steal jobs from you guys. It is your strategy.
Okay. What do you think? I'd love to hear your thoughts.”
Jack Ma didn’t say this with malice. He said it with the frustration of someone who once admired the American dream—and who can see, with painful clarity, that America’s wounds are self-inflicted.
The U.S. didn't lose its edge because China "stole jobs." It lost because its elite chose speculation over production, war over workers, and hedge funds over hardware.
Now, we live with the consequences: hollowed-out cities, collapsing infrastructure, unaffordable housing, a disillusioned middle class, and an unholy alliance between government and capital that serves no one but itself.
This isn’t about left or right. It’s about survival.
If America is to recover, it must re-center its economy around people—not profits. Around production—not portfolios. Around national interest—not Wall Street quarterly reports.
Jack Ma isn’t just offering a critique. He’s offering a mirror.
And if America keeps looking away, it won’t like what it becomes.