WHY SHARPIES ARE MADE IN AMERICA AGAIN
President Donald Trump loves a Sharpie pen, and now he has all the more reason to love the company that makes them.
The president signed the flurry of executive orders he issued the day he returned to office with a Sharpie.
He's used them for years, finding them more reliable than fancier pens.
Now we know they have another merit, too: They're almost entirely made in America.
Only the felt tip of a Sharpie comes from abroad -- it's made in Japan, according to the Wall Street Journal's Natasha Khan, who published an eye-opening article on the penmaker last week.
What makes Newell Brands, the corporation behind the Sharpie, so newsworthy is its success saving money -- and holding down consumer prices -- by making the pens in America.
Newell was once as dazzled as other manufacturers by the prospect of making its products more cheaply in Asia.
But in 2018, CFO Chris Peterson looked into producing the latest Sharpie, a gel version, at the company's factory in Maryville, Tennessee.
The new pen required updating the plant and training workers to operate and maintain the new machines.
Yet that's what made the project a triumph: investment, in an American factory and the Americans working there.
At the beginning of September, I told you how French President Emmanuel Macron was 




Mount Athos, Greece. The Monastic Community of Mount Athos has been independent from the rest of the world for over a thousand years. In all that time, no woman has been allowed to enter. 20 Eastern Orthodox Christian monasteries, home to some 2,000 monks, are scattered along the Athos peninsula at the apex of the Aegean Sea. The most dramatic of them is Simonopetra built in the 1200s on a huge granite rock hanging on a cliff 1,000 feet above the sea.



