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#1
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On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote:
"Scotty" wrote in message . .. "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe |
#2
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"Joe" wrote in message
oups.com... On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Scotty" wrote in message . .. "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe Agreed. However, 100s of 1000s are dependent on the agreements that were reached when the industry was healthy. You can't cut people off at the knees, so something needs to be worked out... gee, here's a solution... universal healthcare. Everyone is then covered and the auto industry can recover. Sorry... I know that's pretty liberal of me. g -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#3
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On May 18, 10:28 am, "Capt. JG" wrote:
"Joe" wrote in message oups.com... On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Scotty" wrote in message m... "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz -Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe Agreed. However, 100s of 1000s are dependent on the agreements that were reached when the industry was healthy. You can't cut people off at the knees, so something needs to be worked out... gee, here's a solution... universal healthcare. Everyone is then covered and the auto industry can recover. Sorry... I know that's pretty liberal of me. g -- "j" ganz - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well the union people and bean counters had billions to invest and manage to cover the cost of heathcare ect and did a **** poor job of it. When you retire you have the option of taking all your stock and selling it and investing in other forms of retirement. Let's face it, the days of 20 years with a company and a gold watch retirement party and lifetime pensions are over. If you wan't anything for your retirement you better leverage your career now and plan for your own retirement. Here is the choice (reality) for for the American auto industry. 1. Start over without all the dead weight, so we can compete on a world market. 2. No USA auto makers. Joe |
#4
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"Joe" wrote in message
ups.com... On May 18, 10:28 am, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message oups.com... On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Scotty" wrote in message m... "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz -Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe Agreed. However, 100s of 1000s are dependent on the agreements that were reached when the industry was healthy. You can't cut people off at the knees, so something needs to be worked out... gee, here's a solution... universal healthcare. Everyone is then covered and the auto industry can recover. Sorry... I know that's pretty liberal of me. g -- "j" ganz - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well the union people and bean counters had billions to invest and manage to cover the cost of heathcare ect and did a **** poor job of it. When you retire you have the option of taking all your stock and selling it and investing in other forms of retirement. Let's face it, the days of 20 years with a company and a gold watch retirement party and lifetime pensions are over. If you wan't anything for your retirement you better leverage your career now and plan for your own retirement. Here is the choice (reality) for for the American auto industry. 1. Start over without all the dead weight, so we can compete on a world market. 2. No USA auto makers. Joe I guess that begs the question... do we need GM if Toyota builds cars in the US? -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#5
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On May 18, 8:11 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote:
"Joe" wrote in message ups.com... On May 18, 10:28 am, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message groups.com... On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Scotty" wrote in message m... "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz -Hidequoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe Agreed. However, 100s of 1000s are dependent on the agreements that were reached when the industry was healthy. You can't cut people off at the knees, so something needs to be worked out... gee, here's a solution... universal healthcare. Everyone is then covered and the auto industry can recover. Sorry... I know that's pretty liberal of me. g -- "j" ganz -Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well the union people and bean counters had billions to invest and manage to cover the cost of heathcare ect and did a **** poor job of it. When you retire you have the option of taking all your stock and selling it and investing in other forms of retirement. Let's face it, the days of 20 years with a company and a gold watch retirement party and lifetime pensions are over. If you wan't anything for your retirement you better leverage your career now and plan for your own retirement. Here is the choice (reality) for for the American auto industry. 1. Start over without all the dead weight, so we can compete on a world market. 2. No USA auto makers. Joe I guess that begs the question... do we need GM if Toyota builds cars in the US? -- "j" ganz - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'll never buy a toyata, or any other jap mobile. Having a strong industrial base is what made our country great, you may be happy building Japan, but Id rather support Americans. If I had my way, I'd impose a trade tariff that would level the field with the japs and preserve the retirements that our mfgr's bear the burden of. 40-50% import tax. And no country would be able to sell us more than we sell them. Joe |
#6
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On 18 May 2007 20:10:10 -0700, Joe wrote:
On May 18, 8:11 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message ups.com... On May 18, 10:28 am, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message groups.com... On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Scotty" wrote in message m... "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz -Hidequoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe Agreed. However, 100s of 1000s are dependent on the agreements that were reached when the industry was healthy. You can't cut people off at the knees, so something needs to be worked out... gee, here's a solution... universal healthcare. Everyone is then covered and the auto industry can recover. Sorry... I know that's pretty liberal of me. g -- "j" ganz -Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well the union people and bean counters had billions to invest and manage to cover the cost of heathcare ect and did a **** poor job of it. When you retire you have the option of taking all your stock and selling it and investing in other forms of retirement. Let's face it, the days of 20 years with a company and a gold watch retirement party and lifetime pensions are over. If you wan't anything for your retirement you better leverage your career now and plan for your own retirement. Here is the choice (reality) for for the American auto industry. 1. Start over without all the dead weight, so we can compete on a world market. 2. No USA auto makers. Joe I guess that begs the question... do we need GM if Toyota builds cars in the US? -- "j" ganz - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'll never buy a toyata, or any other jap mobile. Having a strong industrial base is what made our country great, you may be happy building Japan, but Id rather support Americans. If I had my way, I'd impose a trade tariff that would level the field with the japs and preserve the retirements that our mfgr's bear the burden of. 40-50% import tax. And no country would be able to sell us more than we sell them. Joe And you'd end up with high priced junk that no one could afford but would have to buy because they would not have a choice. The U. S. Auto industry had all the opportunity in the world to improve. They could have embraced Demming when he was trying to move them in the right direction. They wouldn't give him the time of day, laughed him out of the country. He went to Japan and the rest is history. Statistical Process Control became the foundation for DOE, lean manufacturing and all the other innovative methods the Japanese use to make the highest quality, massed produced products in the world. They consider him a national treasure. An American. The playing field with the Japs is level. They build here and have to endure the same environmental, safety, workers comp foolishness, litigation environment, potential for labor organization, that the big three do. Difference is they have adopted methods to do it better, while the U. S. corporations continue to just pay their executives higher bonuses and stock options for crappy performance, and boards of directors go along because they are at the trough too. As I type, Toyota is building an assembly plant twelve miles, as the crow flies, from my house. Going to provide 4000 quality jobs. In an area of the country where all the U. S. Corporations are sending those "extravagant" $10/hour jobs to china (theres where you have a playing field that is in full tilt) so they can pay $1/hr to offer you crap at a price that makes a killing for them. Now, you drive what you want but who do you think I will support? Frank |
#7
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![]() "Frank Boettcher" wrote in message ... I'll never buy a toyata, or any other jap mobile. Having a strong industrial base is what made our country great, you may be happy building Japan, but Id rather support Americans. If I had my way, I'd impose a trade tariff that would level the field with the japs and preserve the retirements that our mfgr's bear the burden of. 40-50% import tax. And no country would be able to sell us more than we sell them. Joe And you'd end up with high priced junk that no one could afford but would have to buy because they would not have a choice. Exactly, like Harley D in the 70s-90s. SBV |
#8
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On May 19, 8:02 am, Frank Boettcher wrote:
On 18 May 2007 20:10:10 -0700, Joe wrote: On May 18, 8:11 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message roups.com... On May 18, 10:28 am, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message groups.com... On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Scotty" wrote in message m... "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz -Hidequotedtext - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe Agreed. However, 100s of 1000s are dependent on the agreements that were reached when the industry was healthy. You can't cut people off at the knees, so something needs to be worked out... gee, here's a solution... universal healthcare. Everyone is then covered and the auto industry can recover. Sorry... I know that's pretty liberal of me. g -- "j" ganz -Hidequoted text - - Show quoted text - Well the union people and bean counters had billions to invest and manage to cover the cost of heathcare ect and did a **** poor job of it. When you retire you have the option of taking all your stock and selling it and investing in other forms of retirement. Let's face it, the days of 20 years with a company and a gold watch retirement party and lifetime pensions are over. If you wan't anything for your retirement you better leverage your career now and plan for your own retirement. Here is the choice (reality) for for the American auto industry. 1. Start over without all the dead weight, so we can compete on a world market. 2. No USA auto makers. Joe I guess that begs the question... do we need GM if Toyota builds cars in the US? -- "j" ganz -Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'll never buy a toyata, or any other jap mobile. Having a strong industrial base is what made our country great, you may be happy building Japan, but Id rather support Americans. If I had my way, I'd impose a trade tariff that would level the field with the japs and preserve the retirements that our mfgr's bear the burden of. 40-50% import tax. And no country would be able to sell us more than we sell them. Joe And you'd end up with high priced junk that no one could afford but would have to buy because they would not have a choice. The U. S. Auto industry had all the opportunity in the world to improve. They could have embraced Demming when he was trying to move them in the right direction. They wouldn't give him the time of day, laughed him out of the country. He went to Japan and the rest is history. Statistical Process Control became the foundation for DOE, lean manufacturing and all the other innovative methods the Japanese use to make the highest quality, massed produced products in the world. They consider him a national treasure. An American. The playing field with the Japs is level. They build here and have to endure the same environmental, safety, workers comp foolishness, litigation environment, potential for labor organization, that the big three do. Difference is they have adopted methods to do it better, while the U. S. corporations continue to just pay their executives higher bonuses and stock options for crappy performance, and boards of directors go along because they are at the trough too. As I type, Toyota is building an assembly plant twelve miles, as the crow flies, from my house. Going to provide 4000 quality jobs. In an area of the country where all the U. S. Corporations are sending those "extravagant" $10/hour jobs to china (theres where you have a playing field that is in full tilt) so they can pay $1/hr to offer you crap at a price that makes a killing for them. Now, you drive what you want but who do you think I will support? Frank- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Frank American mfgs use Black belt, Kitzan, ISO, and have pretty much adopted the same quality control standards as the Japs. But you are correct Demming was the best. America missed out big time on taking advantage of what he was teaching. That's not the issue. The issue is the massive overhead from unions ect..that the US mfg. have to lug around. GM is 10,000.00 dollars in the hole before they even start building a car. And if stock owners and the boards feel they need to pay top money to attract top talent what's wrong with that? Again no one is going to leverage your career for you now days, so you need to leverage your own skills and manage your own retirement. Joe |
#9
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"Joe" wrote in message
oups.com... On May 18, 8:11 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message ups.com... On May 18, 10:28 am, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message groups.com... On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Scotty" wrote in message m... "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz -Hidequoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe Agreed. However, 100s of 1000s are dependent on the agreements that were reached when the industry was healthy. You can't cut people off at the knees, so something needs to be worked out... gee, here's a solution... universal healthcare. Everyone is then covered and the auto industry can recover. Sorry... I know that's pretty liberal of me. g -- "j" ganz -Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well the union people and bean counters had billions to invest and manage to cover the cost of heathcare ect and did a **** poor job of it. When you retire you have the option of taking all your stock and selling it and investing in other forms of retirement. Let's face it, the days of 20 years with a company and a gold watch retirement party and lifetime pensions are over. If you wan't anything for your retirement you better leverage your career now and plan for your own retirement. Here is the choice (reality) for for the American auto industry. 1. Start over without all the dead weight, so we can compete on a world market. 2. No USA auto makers. Joe I guess that begs the question... do we need GM if Toyota builds cars in the US? -- "j" ganz - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'll never buy a toyata, or any other jap mobile. Having a strong industrial base is what made our country great, you may be happy building Japan, but Id rather support Americans. If I had my way, I'd impose a trade tariff that would level the field with the japs and preserve the retirements that our mfgr's bear the burden of. 40-50% import tax. And no country would be able to sell us more than we sell them. Not even if they're built in the US, using US labor and parts made in the US? Hmmm... And, hate to tell you, but tariff don't work, except possibly in the short term. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#10
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![]() "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message oups.com... On May 17, 3:03 pm, "Capt. JG" wrote: "Scotty" wrote in message . .. "Capt. JG" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message Yeah, that's the ticket... fire or at least blame the workers for _negotiating_ successfully. the ''workers'', and I use that term loosely, only do / vote what the mob / union bosses tell them to. SBV So what? At this point, who's going to be harmed, according to Joe's post... the boss' or the workers? -- "j" ganz - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hey Jon. In case you have not noticed the Americaqn auto industry is in deep trouble because of all the dead weight the unions strapped them with. The American auto industry spends more money on heathcare for RETIRED employees than they spend on steel. Just how is any company going to make a profit when they are forking out so much? The only way they can compete in a world market is to start over without the dead weight. Joe Agreed. However, 100s of 1000s are dependent on the agreements that were reached when the industry was healthy. You can't cut people off at the knees, so something needs to be worked out... gee, here's a solution... universal healthcare. Everyone is then covered and the auto industry can recover. Sorry... I know that's pretty liberal of me. g Of the 10 or so UAW members that I know personally, about half intend to retire at age 50 or younger. The others won't work beyond 55. That leaves an average of 23 years during which those retired employees will be draining the auto companies' profits with zero productivity. So you propose so-called "universal health care." Since Hugo Chavez isn't our leader, and we don't have his oil money to finance this socialist health care agenda, someone will have to pay for it. Of course business will be footing the bill (and probably the middle class, as usual). Hillary's plan in the early 90s assumed that most business would be paying more in taxes to cover "universal health care" than they were paying for covering their employees under their current plans. Wow, that makes a lot of sense. Max |
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