• Norgur
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    3069 months ago

    I’m very glad to see that US workers finally start to make their voices heard on a meaningful scale!

    And a little amused at the utter inability of managements to deal with a world in which “just boss the underlings around, because we can” isn’t a viable tactic anymore.

    • @[email protected]
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      559 months ago

      It’s giving me hope for the future of workers, I’m thinking of deeper effects strikes like this could have. Thousands of people going on strike, a lot of them likely for the first time. If these get results, thousands of people will know first hand the power of class-consciousness and collective action, without relying on voting or petitions but concrete action. It will inspire their views going forward and inspire other workers.

  • Margot Robbie
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    2519 months ago

    Very happy to see workers from different industries finally standing up for their rights and forcing the companies to the negotiating table, and winning.

    Unions are awesome, and strikes work.

    • @[email protected]
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      1209 months ago

      Quick search says

      Kentucky Truck is Ford’s largest plant and one of the largest auto factories in America and the world

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      kentucky truck refers to the ford plant in kentucky that makes a number of trucks for ford, mostly their commercial fleet, that accounts for around half of ford’s revenue

      the meaning here is that the kentucky truck plant has ceased operation as part of the strike

    • AutistoMephisto
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      909 months ago

      The largest truck plant Ford has. They manufactured everything from industrial diesel trucks to pickups. Now they’re on strike, this promises to be a huge blow to Ford’s quarterlies.

  • @[email protected]
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    259 months ago

    Is there a way I can donate to a pool that directly helps striking workers? If there’s not, is there a way to start a go fund me and hand control over to a union representative?

    • @winterayars
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      119 months ago

      Looks like they just expanded their strike, so no… not yet.

  • @[email protected]
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    -1419 months ago

    I’m glad to see these workers getting what they want but don’t we all know the cost of whatever they get will just be passed on to the consumer and further balloon the price of cars? If car prices get much higher you’ll have to be a factory worker making 100k just to buy one.

    • @[email protected]
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      909 months ago

      So executive bonuses and salaries can keep skyrocketing with no consequence, but workers getting what they need is what you complain about?

      • @[email protected]
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        08 months ago

        No. I’m complaining that what they are getting is just a bandaid to the problem. These workers getting paid more won’t stop executive bonuses and salaries from skyrocketing and the money to fund those bonuses will just be pulled from our pockets. Until some regulation is in place to fix the underlying issue, employers and employees will just keep trading blows and running up the cost. Everyone is acting like these car companies are suddenly going to stop doing what they’ve been doing for decades.

    • @[email protected]
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      649 months ago

      Oh yeah because cars are selling close to cost and not at hyper inflated prices.

      Come on, the current insane prices aren’t because it costs so much to pay workers that make them, it’s because people are willing to pay it. If people stopped paying insane prices for cars and they were rotting on lots, prices would go down- but people get their 6 year finance on their 85k 2024 whatever.

      • @[email protected]
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        229 months ago

        And very little of the recent explosion in car prices is from the manufacturers. It’s the dealerships.

        Just a few years ago NOBODY paid sticker price. That’s still true, but now it’s because the dealerships are charging 20-50 percent ABOVE stocker price

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        I’m not disagreeing with you but it seems naive to think that these companies would do anything but pass the cost along and keep paying execs way too much. Are we really under the assumption that car manufacturers are going to accept making less money?

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          Of course not- but they wont have a choice if people stop ponying up. As long as people keep enabling the high prices, they’ll keep charging them. The market will only support so much of this before someone comes with with a a more reasonable price and starts taking all the sales. Then it’ll be a race to the bottom again.

    • @[email protected]
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      599 months ago

      The workers shouldn’t be the ones to suffer so that we have cheaper cars. The greed of the ownership class has to be contained.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      The big automakers are already pricing themselves out of most consumers reach.

      Hell at this point you’re not even buying a car, you’re buying a 7-10 year loan and getting a car as part of it. The car itself exists only as a means to sell the loan (and long-term service).

      • @[email protected]
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        149 months ago

        You never own the car any more, it runs closed source offline software that farms you for data. It is a rented tool for the neo digital feudal serf class. Ownership is only a right for citizens. Proprietary means ownership through a loss of agency. Once ownership rights are lost slavery follows. This is the true legacy of our time that people will talk about for hundreds of years.

    • @[email protected]
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      289 months ago

      This neocon “pass on the cost” lie is so pervasive it sounds convincing until you think about it for two seconds. If that were true, then I would just “pass on the cost” of my labor and charge my employer more for my wages. But that’s not how the economy works. The shareholders and executives will just make a little less.

      • @[email protected]
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        59 months ago

        It’s a little more nuanced than that. Prices are always set to “what the market will bear.” By complaining about the additional labor costs (or patting themselves on the back for their benevolence), they may be able to shift market attitudes to increase the price, thus 'passing it on."

        • 🐱TheCat
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          59 months ago

          also all the anti-trust violations and monopolies help with the price gouging. We don’t have real regulation for crony capitalism in the USA.

          Hell, the GOP seems to think there’s no such thing anymore, and that capitalism is a magical machine that needs no regulation at all.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        That’s not how it works because the majority of us don’t get to adjust the rate of our labor on the fly. Passing the cost to consumers literally happens all the time and it’s not a secret.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        Not bootlicking. Just being realistic about the capitalist tendencies of any large company beholden to shareholders.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      Who is upvoting this brain dead take?

      Cars are sold for as much as they possibly can get consumers to pay. If they managed to lower the cost of production, price would also remain exactly the same because… They are charging as much as they possibly can.

      Everything between the cost of making the car and that price is profit to shareholders.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        So you actually think this strike is going to fundamentally change how they do business? With no additional regulation they will just decide to make less money and make no attempt to do exactly what they’ve been doing all these years which is to increase profits at all costs.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        I don’t think most people buy a car they can actually afford anyways. They take loans with ridiculously long notes and as long as the payment from month to month sounds good they’ll sign.