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United Automobile Workers of America (UAW)

16701 messages, Last post on Nov 20, 2009 at 3:39 AM
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Replying to: marsha7 (Dec 14, 2008 10:38 am) Fancy professional name. Who funds them and their research? Are they subject to peer review? On the flip side, all that does is try and justify giving the money to the Big 3 simply to maintain the FACADE of a manufacturing company, who will continue to make a product that no one wants to buy... Plenty of folks out their products and will continue to do so. I'll give you that they have some losers, model which are not as great as they could be. However, they have many more which are world class. The "entitlement" attitude of the average auto worker would put the average sports hero to shame...they think they can do no wrong, when they are about to be jettisoned to find out they will do nothing anymore... A person working all this overtime is just someone trying to do right by their family. Time off is the most expensive thing they can give themselves. While Madison Ave and this society bombard them with all the creature comforts which they would be better off with, they are taken in. Yeah they could cut off the cable TV, do away with cell Phones, internet service, and the many other non essentials. Then there would be less economic activity and thats by no means good in a capitalist system. You have the Big Three offering the overtime. They do it in order not to hire the additional employee. The UAW has recognized that people need time off, family time. So to discourage overtime they have a fund. $1 for each hour they work a UAW employee is put into this fund and the UAW/GM NASCAR is funded. I would consider it corporate greed/business sense in their not wanting to hire that additional employee to give the workforce relief. |
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Replying to: dallasdude1 (Dec 14, 2008 2:10 pm) I know it's been almost 15 years since I've been out of college, but I remember having access through the university for fairly cheap health insurance if I would have needed it. I know our current employer provided insurance will cover our kids until 24 years old. I can't see that as being a reason why people decide not to go to college. The 1944 GI Bill gave America a 40% college graduate rate. The other competing nations were 25% at most. I don't believe 40% of high school graduates went on to get a degree during the late 40's. I've read where nearly 1/2 of the WWII surviving veterans took advantage of the GI Bill, but the GI bill wasn't just for education, as it provided low cost mortgage loans etc. This is from the census bureau in 2004. Last year, 85 percent of adults age 25 and over had completed at least high school, an all-time high, the U.S. Census Bureau reported today. Also in 2003, 27 percent of adults age 25 and over had a college degree, another record. census
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Replying to: tlong (Dec 14, 2008 2:18 pm) Pick your poison. I would consider a BMW before any Toyota/Honda product. I'm a realist. China is subsidizing an inefficient steel industry and thereby making the more efficient producer go out of business. Thats a communist country. High level communist and their families are getting rich. They have one metric"JOBS". this assures the status quo and no uprising/social unrest. That might redistribute the wealth/income. If these multi national want access to one-fifth of the future consumers they must tolerate whatever China demands. Level that trading field. It has a slope which drops like a cliff. Competition is all and good in the text books, but this is a real world. All I see is a one way street and all manufacturing going to China. All the while corporate America/multi nationals have to suffer the unrighteous indignations and put up with them. That is if they someday want to have access to one-fifths of the future consumers of the planet. Patents, intellectual property, copy rights, and other silly western notions are violates daily. Violate as much if not more than human rights, child/prison labor, environmental crimes, and you name it. Many companies in China make product by day and knock offs by night. Why would we trade with China, by far a greater abuser of human rights than Cuba? Cuba doesn't have the one-fifth of the worlds future consumers. The population of China and India (Chindia) have one third of the futures consumers. If they tell a multi national to move a plant to the main land, they can't move it fast enough. The only thing I agree with you on is that those model were dogs. However, you have to consider the Toyota offering in the early days too. You don't even want to see their Matrix thread here on Edmund's.
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Replying to: dieselone (Dec 14, 2008 3:17 pm) http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/display.article?id=10877
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Replying to: gagrice (Dec 13, 2008 10:06 pm) The winds of change might call for sympathy strikes. Maybe by all union and non union. Folks are reasonable as long as you treat them fair.This is the 2000's and not the 30's, 40's, or 50's.
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Replying to: dallasdude1 (Dec 14, 2008 3:46 pm) |
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Replying to: dallasdude1 (Dec 14, 2008 4:02 pm) There are legitimate strikes. No UAW strike in the last 10 years comes under that cover. GM has been bleeding red ink for 20 years. Every time GM comes up with a winner the UAW has tried to take advantage with a strike. Bailing out that kind of greed is criminal. Striking for parity against a company making a legitimate profit is what good Union leaders do. The UAW have leaders that need to be taken out and beat. They have destroyed the good jobs that were built over decades. |
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"Meanwhile there are a couple of guys from the Deep South manning the telegraph station who wouldn't know a bergy bit from a growler wondering what the problem is and why someone is sending out an SOS. And just as he was trying to leave the office, the harbormaster has to go bail out his dingy and try to find his oars." It seems to me that our host has trouble staying on topic...30 lashes, matey, and ye shall walk the plank (or, if you like physics, walk the Planck, as in Planck's Constant)...
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Replying to: marsha7 (Dec 14, 2008 6:26 pm) Be careful what you wish for or I'll bury you in links... He said, he said: Battle heats up between UAW and Republicans (Detroit News) "I am telling you there are over 100,000 people in Tennessee – people exactly like you and me -- who are getting ready to be horribly and brutally affected by the automotive industry collapse." Roy Exum: Pigs and Money (Chattanoogan.com) "An abrupt bankruptcy for autos could be devastating for the economy," Bush told reporters. The UAW's Gettelfinger said the failure of the legislation showed that Congress should stay "away from the bargaining table." White House: No immediate deal on auto loans (AP) Gettelfinger, often a harsh Bush critic, said he hopes to avoid a rerun of the Senate showdown in which "organized labor was singled out." It's not only automakers in trouble, but their suppliers. Fitch Ratings put seven on ratings watch last week because of vulnerability to GM, including American Axle, ArvinMeritor, Hayes-Lemmerz, Johnson Controls, Tenneco, TRW and Visteon." Carmakers feel urgency to see Bush act on rescue plan (USA Today) And a headline especially for you Bob: North and South split as US battles to save GM, Chrysler and Ford (Times Online) The blurb - "The UAW says that a double standard has operated by which the South has attracted investment from foreign car companies, with more than $3 billion of state subsidies since 1992 — while denying help for the North."
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Replying to: steve_ (Dec 14, 2008 7:30 pm) And the sad thing is, the restaurant my friend is working at is actually doing a good business, even in these times! Yet, he and everyone there is in danger of losing their jobs because of something going on in a completely different industry!. He's already looked into picking up a part time job at another restaurant, and if his place goes under, he'll be able to pick up more hours. Some of his co-workers have done the same, and I think the managers are looking into other alternatives. |
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