Smith, et al,
First, on your original post: IMHO, congratulating or praising an endeavor that is, as much as reasonably possible, US based by no means calls into question or criticizes those endeavors that are not. I completely agree with your remarks as US based GT40 products have been sorely missed; especially where the broader market is concerned. I too applaud what Fran has done and am duly impressed!
As to nationalism in general, we Americans (and I include myself) are really funny! We will talk, genuinely, about how good it is to have homemade products and support those products. On the other hand, we aren't a bit bashful about buying products that have lower prices as the result of monetary value differences (or for any other reason.) We talk the talk, but when it comes to peeling off dollars, we'll peel off as few as possible no matter what the "Made In" label says
But, beyond the bottom line, there are quite a few other factors that make US made products attractive to US buyers: shipping time, access to the company, physically inspecting products, etc, etc are much simpler for the broader US market when the product is produced here.
With respect to openness in profiles: I have to agree with Hersh on this one Smith. If you want the members here to read your posts and consider them credible, make the posts openly as yourself, not an anonymous moniker like Smith. Agree or disagree, I firmly believe that the majority of the forum membership will take you comments with a grain of salt as long as they are done anonymously. Trust me, the imaginings of the membership, in terms of who you are and your motivations, will be much worse than reality could ever be

that is just human nature.
Regards,
Lynn