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hllywd

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  1. Still scrolling through the 800+ pages. Are the product commitments listed under Job Security?
  2. Fuzzy when were you at Flat Rock? I was a guest of AAI from May/2003 until Feb/2007 when I returned to Livonia. Was a team leader in unit 17 on the dreaded 6:54PM-5:24AM shift.
  3. It's going to be difficult to work with some of these people moving forward. The same ones screaming solidarity and saying vote no are the ones who don't get along with anybody and do whatever they can to make their work life better at the expense of others when we're not on strike. There are many examples but one is especially egregious. This poor woman was getting berated for working overtime. She was on medical leave for 6 months. If she doesn't get hours now she'll lose vacation time and profit sharing next year. These a-holes said she should've planned better. Are you freaking kidding me? How do you plan ahead for a long term, unexpected medical leave? I've learned that what they really mean by solidarity is that we're all supposed to drink the same kool aid and subscribe to their ways of thinking. To me, however, solidarity goes both ways. We don't know people's situations outside of work. We should all be supporting each other.
  4. Some of the idiots here are already asking to have their "no" votes counted now... haven't even seen the details but they'll still vote no. These people piss me off!
  5. WDRB in Kentucky reporting same. Nothing on UAW site yet. Fingers crossed!
  6. Having unelected political activists with no factory or union experience who have openly stated that they want chaos, class warfare and to wound the companies for months ticks me off. Describes these guys as carnies because they sweep in, reap destruction and then move on. They don't care if they kill the company as long as they achieve their mission. The article also illustrates that these knuckleheads sit directly next to Fain at negotiations, leaving negotiators openly asking who they are actually negotiating with? We didn't vote these guys in and yet it sounds like they're actually running the show. Really wish the Detroit 3 would take this to NLRB, file unfair labor practice and demand arbitration. Fain loses then.
  7. Did GM Arlington just walk out? Seeing rumblings but not widely reported.
  8. That's idiotic! First off, the democrats are the ones pushing mandatory EVs...which only have a niche market, not to mention the infrastructure doesn't exist. Last summer CA asked citizens not to charge their vehicles because with all the A/C running due to heatwave they were already facing rolling brown outs. Additionally, it's already been discussed ad nauseum that EVs require significantly less labor to assemble. So the union is supporting politicians who are killing our jobs. We saw this with Obama; the union overwhelmingly supported Obama, who sent work to Mexico and said manufacturing jobs would never come back to America. Furthermore, if the recession lasts until election time then it's likely the existing party in power gets voted out. Should that happen the EV mandate disappears. I wonder if that's part of the reason that the companies are hedging on going all in on EVs? The union sure seems to be engaging in self-defeating behaviors. They're more concerned with PR and organizing new union members and they fail to recognize the very real possibility of their actions causing union jobs to disappear... possibly forever.
  9. I heard that because Fain didn't strike all of MAP that some employees have to cross the picket line to report to work. That can't be good for morale of those striking. Not to mention that it's getting ugly between people who want a quick resolution (who think the offer is more than fair) and the hardliners who say "We striking until WE GET EVERYTHING!" Fain acknowledged on Friday that he's heard and seen rumblings and impatience. He seems to think he has some mandate but only 11% voted and he only won by 0.4%. Many feel the offer is solid and want to vote. But too many think this is their "once in a generation" opportunity to make history. But I don't think that they're making the kind of history that they think they are. The participation trophy generation thinks all they have to do is show up and get paid. They are screaming the loudest about "We getting everything". When I tried explaining that, as a legacy employee, and therefore someone who currently has a pension, that I would be open to being bought out of my pension and transitioned to the new 401k offer on the table (because I'm divorced and can't leave my pension to my kids if I die but 401k can be), the response I received was "I want both!" The AOCs and Bernie Sanders of the works have convinced these brats that they're entitled to both. They have no clue how the "real world" works. And the hardliners see this as their opportunity to make their grandparents proud; the forefathers of the union that led the sit down strike and the battle of the overpass. But they aren't serious students of history and the world has changed. Back then, you had a choice between Ford, Chevy and Dodge. Their are way more options to choose from today and companies must remain competitive. In the end, Fain, the participation trophy generation and the hardliners may win some battles but I fear that they will lose all of us the war. As I said, I think the silent majority thinks the latest offer is more than fair and we just want to get back to work and return to some sense of normalcy. With that being said, there are many fractured relationships that are going to be difficult to navigate moving forward.
  10. History like this needs to be relayed in the media. There are too many from the participation trophy generation that aren't aware of situations like this. And the hardliners won't care anyway. But I think the silent majority would be swayed if they had all the facts.
  11. I hope that's true. Where Farley and Fain have been publicly sparring, I thought that Junior came across as the elder statesman; a voice of calm and reason. He said he never considers his employees as the enemy. And knucklehead Fain, on cue, responded immediately that the days of Ford/UAW being friends are over, and that it's all autoworkers against corporate greed. That's why I feel he's more concerned with (attempting to) organizing Tesla and the transplants than he is with trying to reach an agreement. While he said he's received hundreds of calls I'm not sure he can read the room. There has always been SOME interest in unionizing southern plants, but never enough to pass a vote.
  12. Reading between the lines of some of his Friday comments, it appears that Fain is more interested in growing the union than he is in obtaining an agreement.
  13. Fain said Friday that the days of Ford and UAW being friends are over. ?‍♂️
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