Disruptors of trade, which also include inflation and global geopolitical tensions, have, as we wrote in August 2022, “put advocates of the original globalization . . . on the defensive.” Recent interruptions to trade, along with the geopolitical and geo-economic objectives of leaders of the world’s largest economies, have produced shifts in the way trade is taking place. Businesses and government entities have, of necessity, developed new strategies and practices to obtain the raw materials, parts and inputs needed to create their products. One aspect of this Revised Globalism is a change in manufacturing.