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The Made in America PPE Movement – The Time is NOW

It’s time to answer to the medical voices of our healthcare frontline workers and provide a solid supply chain in the U.S. to deliver the necessary protection equipment required for our country in times of pandemics. We should not be relying on Asia or EU to supply our much-needed supplies and ensure we are providing the safety measures necessary for today and our future.  SEAMS.org member companies have the capacity to turn on PPE equipment to support our country. 

SSD is proud to be a part of the SEAMS Made in America PPE movement and ask you support those companies keeping Americans safe and the lights in here at home.

6 Responses to “The Made in America PPE Movement – The Time is NOW”

  1. Robert says:

    This is the way.

  2. Amer-Rican says:

    Soldier Systems deserves much respect for their part in this critical movement… BRING BACK manufacturing from communist china! MAGA

  3. Dave Loeser says:

    My company has large USG contracts to provide Covid-related PPE and we would LOVE to have more domestic sources. Contact me! David.loeser@federalresources.com
    Good on ya SSD for highlighting!

  4. mark says:

    Found this pretty interesting:

    “Michael Alkire, president of health care resource provider Premier, has already identified 22 items of protective clothing and 30 drugs that are likely “so critical that they need to be produced” in the US, even as the coronavirus continues to tear through American cities.

    “For an N95 [face mask], the cost to manufacture it overseas before the pandemic was about 30 US cents vs 34-36 cents domestically,” Alkire said.

    So really we’re talking about a pretty tiny price difference.

    • Anibal says:

      To the idiot bean counters it matters, that’s why shipped overseas or Mexico, to literally save pennies

  5. Alpha2 says:

    I’ve been saying this for years. We cannot and should not be relying on communist enemy states for manufacturing anything and especially critical drugs. Hopefully a silver lining with the Coronavirus will be the microscope of attention on the pitfalls of globalization.