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It seems like most Americans are missing the forest for the trees.
The free-market is there whether you like it or not. The Global Market is there whether you like it or not...Whether you believe in it or not...kind of like Plate Tectonics.
You can erect barriers to people making money in this country "to protect the little guy" but all you get, if anything, is a short term fix, but long-run it causes an even faster rush for the exits and prevents capital from flowing in.
If you build the cars in China and just sell them here...you say "then who will buy them if we don't have jobs"...the question shoud be who IN AMERICA is going to buy them if we don't have jobs...and the answer is eventually NOBODY but the most wealthy. But the part you are missing is that from the viewpoint of Chrysler it sells as much or more cars at higher margins, making more money. CHRYSLER DOES NOT CARE IF IT EVENTUALLY SELLS ANY CARS IN THE US.
You See Chrysler's plant in China just increased the standard of living in China. That small change in the global allignment of capital increased the demand for things the Chinese want....causing factories and stores to be built supplying things that Chinese want...making more and more Chinese wealthy as they satisfy the Chinese workers demand for more and more stuff...allowing more of them, at first just the wealthy but it will trickle down later, to buy more and better Chrysler cars...RIGHT THERE IN CHINA.
Remember,selling anything to the wealthiest 20% of Chinese is the same as selling to the entire US population sheer numbers wise.
If the general public continue to believe the continued rantings of the media, unions, and politicians, we are in real trouble.
and the perfect union country of England does not result in the same thing? Unions have a good track record of destroying companies with unsustainable demands, reference GM, US Steel, Wyandott Chemical, etcIt is a ticket to a failed country and failed economy.
If it all would be so simple... If I look at big $$$ industry in another country, like the car industry in Germany, manufacturers like Audi, BMW, Opel (GM), Porsche, VW etc. and their rather strong unions, your argument of blaming unions for a company heading south just doesn't cut it...and the perfect union country of England does not result in the same thing? Unions have a good track record of destroying companies with unsustainable demands, reference GM, US Steel, Wyandott Chemical, etc
not an expert of German unions, but I read someplace there is an agency in Germany that has final say on union contracts. The contract must increase productivity to offset any wage/benefit increases. Unlike the UAW where you got paid for not working. Yes they are a very strong union country, but are bound my tradition to Trade Craft, where going to a trade school after a few years of High School is a chosen career path. As opposed to the US where if you don't go to college you are looked down upon.If it all would be so simple... If I look at big $$$ industry in another country, like the car industry in Germany, manufacturers like Audi, BMW, Opel (GM), Porsche, VW etc. and their rather strong unions, your argument of blaming unions for a company heading south just doesn't cut it...
Read the Wagner Act, commonly known as the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). It's been the law of the land since 1935.
and the perfect union country of England does not result in the same thing? Unions have a good track record of destroying companies with unsustainable demands, reference GM, US Steel, Wyandott Chemical, etc
not an expert of German unions, but I read someplace there is an agency in Germany that has final say on union contracts. The contract must increase productivity to offset any wage/benefit increases. Unlike the UAW where you got paid for not working. Yes they are a very strong union country, but are bound my tradition to Trade Craft, where going to a trade school after a few years of High School is a chosen career path. As opposed to the US where if you don't go to college you are looked down upon.
Hey we are alpa, you need to read the Wagner act, it does not apply to the rights of a company to open plants, period.Read the Wagner Act, commonly known as the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). It's been the law of the land since 1935.
Close the SC plant and then Boeing will open the 87 line up in China. Brilliant! That will help US employees.Hopefully it doesn't pass in the senate.
Here's an idea, put your employee's first, take care of them and you won't have to have unions.
+1By the way, we have had the Bush tax cuts since 2001 and 2003. Obama extended ALL of them, and lowered payroll taxes. We have had all these tax CUTS in place for years. Tax rates on "job creators" have been far lower than Clinton era (good job creation under the higher tax rates) for a decade.
WHERE ARE THE JOBS?
+1
The governor of Michigan cut taxes 99 times under the principle of getting more capital into the hands of the job creators. When she left office the state was 48th in terms of tax burden among the 50 states.
And the jobs? Gone.
In 1994 the UAW pushed GM into a deal it knew it could most likely not fulfill. It gave unlimited medical and COLA to retirees. GM knew a lengthy strike might drive them into BK. They had exhausted the equity markets, and borrowing was the only solution. Much like living off your credit cards. So they bet on maybe things would work, but they knew in the end they were in trouble. The power of a potential union strike drove them to make a bad management decision.Ford and GM are strong, Chrysler is coming back. All still union. Poor management and poor products ruin companies. You always conveniently seem to forget that management and product selection/development are important, only those darned line employees ruin companies.
It would be simpler just to say, "correlation does not equal causation." But I agree with you--tax cuts did not kill jobs in Michigan. However Michigan proves that tax cuts do not automatically save or create jobs either, as the D.C. hand puppets for the wealthy keep repeating as if this is some kind of mathematical certainty.Ya, it was the tax cuts that killed the jobs in Michigan. It couldn't have been the massive unions and their giant pensions that caused most of the plants in Michigan to close or move somewhere else. It also couldn't have been the insane policy of the democrats to promote home ownership to anything with a pulse regardless of whether they could pay for it or not.
This policy lead to corrupt lenders which led to a housing collapse that put a bunch of the laborers/businesses out of work, created massive bank failures, restricted infusions of credit when other companies needed it, caused a trillion dollar bailout, increased the size of the government and created more job killing government regulation.
But no your right it was the tax cuts that killed the jobs and economy.
GOP is running everything in Michigan now; enough people got tired of the same ole union reps running the state. The new governor accomplished more in his first 120 days that the previous governor accomplished in 8 years, but she was pretty so nothing else mattered. The state bond rating has been raised; the state has a balanced budget for the first time in 10 years. A pro-business climate is being established, public employee unions have pressure on them to reform pay and benefits, and state appointed emergency managers are stepping into BK school districts with dictatorial powers to make things right. The public employee unions tried to get a recall on the governor, but got only 300K of the 1.1M signature needed. They could raise no money because it was all going to Wisconsin.It would be simpler just to say, "correlation does not equal causation." But I agree with you--tax cuts did not kill jobs in Michigan. However Michigan proves that tax cuts do not automatically save or create jobs either, as the D.C. hand puppets for the wealthy keep repeating as if this is some kind of mathematical certainty.
Maybe he'll run for president.GOP is running everything in Michigan now; enough people got tired of the same ole union reps running the state. The new governor accomplished more in his first 120 days that the previous governor accomplished in 8 years ...
How are they threatening/interfering with union members rights?
Hey we are alpa, you need to read the Wagner act, it does not apply to the rights of a company to open plants, period.
The WA only applies to companies interfering in union business.
Boeing made public statements that they were moving jobs to SC in retaliation for the union members going on strike in Washington. That is illegal. The NLRA prohibits companies from taking any action in retaliation for legal job actions. If Boeing had been smart, they would have just said that they were moving the plant to SC for purely financial reasons. But because they wanted to scare the union members into not taking any job actions in the future, they did a stupid thing and made public statements that got them in trouble under the law. They deserve all of the pain that they are getting from the NLRB.
Under the NLRA, this is interference in union activities. Taking actions to suppress legal job actions, like retaliating for past legal job actions, is considered interference. Why? Because it suppresses union members from taking actions to protect themselves in the future with further legal job actions. Sorry, you may not like it, but what Boeing has done is illegal, and the NLRB is doing exactly what the law charges them with doing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Al2b-QJjISI&feature=youtube_gdata_playerThe new governor accomplished more in his first 120 days that the previous governor accomplished in 8 years, but she was pretty so nothing else mattered.
As is expected you're fabricating what you want to "be" the truth. Boeing NEVER made a statement saying they are moving a plant to another state due to labor issues, NEVER.Boeing made public statements that they were moving jobs to SC in retaliation for the union members going on strike in Washington. That is illegal. The NLRA prohibits companies from taking any action in retaliation for legal job actions. If Boeing had been smart, they would have just said that they were moving the plant to SC for purely financial reasons. But because they wanted to scare the union members into not taking any job actions in the future, they did a stupid thing and made public statements that got them in trouble under the law. They deserve all of the pain that they are getting from the NLRB.
Under the NLRA, this is interference in union activities. Taking actions to suppress legal job actions, like retaliating for past legal job actions, is considered interference. Why? Because it suppresses union members from taking actions to protect themselves in the future with further legal job actions. Sorry, you may not like it, but what Boeing has done is illegal, and the NLRB is doing exactly what the law charges them with doing.
Boeing responded that because the corporation is not closing its Puget Sound plant, the retaliation claims are "legally frivolous." Boeing recently issued a further statement claiming it would have opened its South Carolina line regardless of labor conditions in Washington state
I liked how Granholm moved to Berkley the day that Synder was sworn in so she could start her new job as a Professor at Cal Berkley.
She really did care about Michigan! Plus the fact that she was a liberal Canadian to start with..
RF
Lets see, who do Ii believe can do the math correctly to decide if a company is going to make money; Boeing, the technological and schedule driven corporation doing positive earnings for decades, or some liberal hack inside the beltway who couldn't balance his own checkbook and merely parrots what his bosses want him to say?
[...] or some liberal hack inside the beltway who couldn't balance his own checkbook and merely parrots what his bosses want him to say?
And now unemployed. Note this has NOTHING to do with the 787. Good thing they contracted around all those high-quality engineers in Seattle so now the wrench-turners lose their jobs.They are trying to employe workers in SC because they can pay them less than half what they must pay in Washington. This is an obvious attempt to circumvent labor contracts with cheap labor.