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Big 3 UAW strike
Warbirds
Member Posts: 16,920 ✭✭✭✭
The big 3 offered a package that included a 20% pay raise.
Unions walked out. Demanding 40% increase over 4 years.
I’ll watch it closely for sure.
Comments
Glad I don't need a new truck.
Joe
It's amazing how brain washed they are, as they are basically forced into cutting their own throats by their Unions. They're donating to have big brother make their own cost of living higher, then trying to work themselves out of a job by driving the cost of their products even higher so the public won't be able to afford a new vehicle...
I'm glad UPS didn't strike, because I sometimes receive parcels from UPS.
That the actors, writers, and so on went on strike, and now the UAW is on strike, does not affect me in the least.
Most of the liberal professors at the institutions of higher learning say we need more unions. Excuse me, pretty soon no one will be able to afford a new vehicle let alone pay the shipping on a firearm purchase. Thankfully, i have a like new truck. -----------Ray
Quote; pretty soon no one will be able to afford a new vehicle
For me, pretty soon already happened quite some time ago!!
I listened to some UAW workers on the picket line yesterday. Their biggest complaint seem to be they needed the raise 40% account of inflation. Let me see if I have this right. Joe said he was going to shut down the fossil fuel industry before the election. Automobiles run on fossil fuel, but yet they voted for Joe because their unions said he was a better choice for them.
As I see it, they give them the raise 40%. Price of American made cars goes up. Company passes the 40% raise on to the price of the car, people can’t afford them. Stock holders put their money somewhere else account of company loosing money, company goes under and shuts down, and workers loss their jobs. JOE WINS. And when it’s over the workers will blame Republicans and still vote Democrat. I’m confused.
I listened to Geriatric Joe the other day say that the Big 3 weren't sharing enough of the profits with the workers. I wonder if he knows about the record breaking profit sharing checks given out to the union members?
"This yr, Stellantis staff will get a median of $14,760, General Motors staff will get a median of $12,750 and Ford staff will get a median of $9,176. The Stellantis and GM payouts are report highs."
I realize they probably don't compare to his 10% for the big guy checks, but they ain't nothing to sneeze at. Bob
Government sending billions to them, the Big 3 for electric autos for their agenda. What if that spicket is turned off? If the Repubs ever take back anything it might then out to drift on the open sea.
40 to 70K for a half ton pick up now. What will the prices be when the strike is settled? My father retired from GM and told me I did good buying my first Nissan.
That's 70 dollars a pound!!!! I'm not paying that!!!
🇺🇲 "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." - Thomas Jefferson 🇺🇲
In 1969 I paid $15,300 for my house. It is now accessed for $392,000. Mostly blood and sweat improvements. Just got school tax bill for $4,000. Total taxes over $7,000. Would be closer to $10,000 were I not a veteran.
Three years ago my 2020 Ram listed for $66,000. Wonder what this truck list for today?
Not a financial genius or expert on inflation but i know something just not right here.
Have lived in my house 54 years. In 2074 wonder what this 54 year old Ram will be worth because i darn sure won't be able to afford another one.--------------------------Ray
I bailed out of a Union mainly because they always throwed their support to the people that I would not vote for and my union dues were just going somewhere (to a unknow place) and I needed that money I was wasting for groceries and kids in school.
I figured out how to take care of myself and not hide behind a Union or have a Union speak for me.
Unions are listening to a supporting Brandon and Brandon is with them, telling them what they WANT TO HEAR just to get their vote.
But It's going to backfire on all. (the workers and Brandon) All them Auto employees are not going to be needed when Brandon does away with them fossil fueled vec's and brings on the EV's.
China will most likely make most of the EV's for the USA. (due to Brandonomics.
They can't seem to see the forest for the trees.
I quit buying UAW products 20 years ago and have absolutely no regrets.
I bet the dealerships will gladly add another $10K to MSRP on these vehicles during the shutdown. Just like they did during Co-vid.
The inevitable result will be either robots or shipping manufacturing out of the country. Those high-paying UAW jobs will be gone. (But the union bosses will continue to make CEO salaries.)
You hit the nail on the head.
Robots get no wages, no overtime, no vacation, no medical, no retirement, and never go on strike.
Yep, they're coming whether the workers strike or not, so they might as well get while the gettin's good.
So the union is accelerating the business case to automation and offshore labor.
Got it.
Me thinks the UAW is about to shoot themselves in the foot long term.------------Ray
Here in the south if you even said the word union you would be fired.Nothing struck fear in textile mill owners than the thought of having to pay a living wage. Now all the textile mills have gone to third world countries.
A big pay raise doesn't do much for them when the jobs are moved out of the country! Talk about a way to get more Chinese vehicles brought into the country, strike. Who in their right mind would ask for a 42% raise, plus work 32 hours get paid for 40 hours.
Will they get paid for a year when biden shuts the country down for 2024 election?
You get a 'LOL' for that but with the "funny, not funny" caveat.
Unions are a thing of the past. They were needed 100+ years ago when corporations truly took advantage of people. These days, that doesn't happen here largely because there's so little manufacturing in America but also because companies and facilities can't hide their atrocities anymore. Information (and disinformation) is everywhere and immediate. And social media is better representation than the UAW. Cheaper, too.
🇺🇲 "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." - Thomas Jefferson 🇺🇲
Kevin, my sweetheart Diane was Office Administrator in Dean's office and former Secretary for Dean at West Point. She never joined the Union. Years ago they had a employee that was trouble with a capitol "T". Darn near killed my wife for two years. It takes almost a Act of God to get rid of or lateral transfer a member of Civil Service Employee's Union.
After the Army and a short stint as a machinist I worked for the Association of Graduates, USMA for 41 years. They treated me with respect and I was so fortunate and proud to work for them. If they did not like my performance, they would have kicked me out the door. Never once felt like I needed a Union to protect me. I was not a Civil Service Employee.---------------Ray
WAY BACK unions were a great necessity. As time went on the criminal element got really involved. Seems since that time unions have been very demanding and not reasonable to deal with🤔
I grew up on the north side of Atlanta. Just down the road was the huge GM plant, GM Assembly Doraville. Must have had 8,000 employees, ran 24 and 7 putting those cars together. Half the students at my high school, Chamblee, had an uncle or father who worked there. Of course the plant was 100 percent UAW.
In 1986 I knew a guy who worked at the plant. Jeff was a rarity in those days, he was a computer expert. He worked 9 to 5, five days a week. He was an outside consultant and was about the only employee there who not in the UAW.
One day, Jeff told me that management had just installed two, 55 gallon drums at the main entrance. He said that the employees were out in the parking lot getting drunk at lunch, and they were throwing the empty Budweiser cans, and the empty pint bottles of Jack Daniels, onto the parking lot. Jeff said it really made a mess when someone ran over the glass bottle, and some guys were getting flat tires. Management would appreciate if they threw the empty booze containers into the 55 gallon drums.
I had heard stories of UAW abuse while I was in high school, but that the union would protect workers who got drunk was unimaginable. Jeff swore it was true.
In 2008, GM Assembly Doraville closed down. The gigantic building, and it covered 2 or 3-hundred acres, was bulldozed.
Allen, never knew, good read. Sounds like the Ford Plant in Mawah. Some of the employee's use to work at the machine shop that I worked at to make ends meet during layoffs or strikes. One UAW worker in particular told my foreman he would not do production work because he was skilled labor. My foreman showed him the door. Mawah is long gone just like Doraville. -------------Ray
Here's some UAW boys at the Chrysler Plant in Detroit having a liquid lunch:
Some of my pals and I at work would joke that we could judge the state of the economy by the brand of empty booze bottles in the parking lot.
The UAW demands are hilarious. 32 hr work week for 40 hr pay? LMAO.
And fiery auto crashes
Some will die in hot pursuit
While sifting through my ashes
Some will fall in love with life
And drink it from a fountain
That is pouring like an avalanche
Coming down the mountain
The jobs I have had, you wouldn't want a quart of beer at lunch. Loading 105 hay bales, 95 pounds each onto a flatbed truck, in Idaho, and then unloading at the barn. Two of us put a thousand a day in the barn. Twelve hour day.
Right down the road a few miles from where the UAW was tossing beer cans in the parking lot, in Atlanta, we were framing up a 3-story apartment building. You are walking that top plate, 3 1/2 inches wide, 30 feet off the ground, if you drank a quart of malt liquor at lunch you would get killed.
I guess you can get away with it in an auto plant.
I grew up in Flint, Michigan - the birthplace of both GM and the UAW. Back in the early 70's an autoworker neighbor introduced me to a friend of his. This guy had his right arm in a cast and said it was work related and he was off on disability until it healed. Turns out he went to one of the many bars located near his particular plant, Fisher Body, and drank his lunch. He stumbled and fell going back to the plant and broke his arm. This got him a couple months off with pay thanks to the UAW. Bob
I grew up in Peoria, IL. A few of my pals after HS gradation went to work for Pabst. They would tell me that it was perfectly OK to grab a bottle off the line and chug it. I guess it was pretty hot in the summer. Falling over was frowned upon though.
cbxjeff-I dated a girl that worked at Hiram Walker WAY back!
When we took trains over to Peoria out of Galesburg, the Hiram Walker plant was right across from the yard office. There were some really builds where they stored the barrels of bourbon. All gone now I believe.
Good grief asop, what was her name? I might have dated her too! Many many years ago Peoria was a huge site of distilleries. I move away in 1958 never to go back except to visit family.