Hi Dandingo, I added some bolding to your quote, because I am curious as to whether you think of Panama, El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico as capitalist? You will find child labor in any of these countries.
I appreciated your point about outsourcing due to increased regulation in the U.S. It brought to mind a scholarly research paper written by Dr. Steve Marquardt: “’Green Havoc’: Panama Disease, Environmental Change, and Labor Process in the Central American Banana Industry, American Historical Review106 (2001): 49–80.
The paper document s the exportation of pesticides and herbicides banned in the U.S. to Central America to the banana plantatons of Central America. A brief review of the history of the region illustrates a high degree of political, economic and corporate involvement (Dole/Chiquita/Del Monte) by the U.S.
Mr. Marquart researched correlations between workers on these plantations exposure to these chemicals and high rates of male infertility. (Entire families are laboring on the plantations). Over time, he found that many of the male workers lost their ability to co-create children.
Of course, our outsourcing of these chemicals and of this form of production comes back to us in cheap, pest free, bananas, but at what cost to these workers and at what cost to our own families who do not know about the conditions under which their food has been grown? Their men, our men, their children, (or children that might have been…) our children…their exposure, and, to a lesser extent, our exposure: it’s a small world after all.
I agree with you about the challenge of finding some U.S. made products, and thought you might appreciate this article about building a madi in the U.S.A. home, and its source list for made in the U.S.A. construction materials.
abcnews.go.com/blogs/business/2011/10/how-to-build-a-made-in-america-home/
I was especially in fascinated with the authors’ note that the cost of this U.S. sourced house was only 1-2% greater than building a foreign sourced house. The security that comes with knowing that regulations might protect your family from the problems associated with wallboard made in China might make that seem extra affordable.

As for U.S. interventions, I’ll leave a few links with slightly different takes,(some more detailed than others) each documenting interventions over time. Two focus on Latin America and the third is global.
I wonder: how many people in this country might describe foreign interventions such as these on U.S. soil as acts of liberation? Why? …or why not?
yachana.org/teaching//resources/interventions.html
faculty.chass.ncsu.edu/griffin/ps543/Timeline%20of%20US-Latin%20American%20Relations%20since%201823.htm
history.navy.mil/wars/foabroad.htm
May God bless the Americas. Amen