Ford lays off 600 workers at plant targeted by UAW strike::Ford is laying off workers while the UAW is striking against Ford, GM, and Stellantis. This is getting complicated.

  • @[email protected]
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    1079 months ago

    It’s not complicated. It’s just a really dumb move.

    Ford said “It’s not a lock out”. Yeah… tell me the difference then. They just don’t want to acknowledge that they’re even playing the game - or maybe they don’t understand.

    If they want to do layoffs in every department that is affected by the strikes they will shut down faster than the strikes could do it. They’re literally helping the union shut down the company, except they’ll make it more difficult for themselves to reopen once an agreement is done.

    The UAW already announced that they’d do stand up strikes, which despite the new name is a good old strategy of moving the strikes to whatever area or department they want to shut down today.

    With these two strategies up against each other, I think the outcome is already determined.

    Ford can not win this by laying off people. It’s not like the union will suddenly back down just because Ford says: “lOOk aT wHaT yOU mADE me dO!!11” while it hurt itself in the confusion.

    • @kautau
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      9 months ago

      or maybe they don’t understand

      They totally do, and the execs are panicking, but historically companies could just have people arrested for striking, or shoot them, so right now they don’t know what to do except try other scare tactics. They’ll try anything before cutting into their “record profits”

      • @[email protected]
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        209 months ago

        Then this is as good a time as any to show them that bullying does not work.

        The strike didn’t fire 600 people. Ford fired 600 people and tried to blame it on the strike.

    • @[email protected]
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      129 months ago

      I think the UAW planned for these layoffs. What is Ford suppose to do with all the workforce standing around when the supply chain has been cut and halted on strategic sections. The whole assembly line is down, not just the striking workers. They were counting on Unemployment benefits from the government to stretch out the UAW fund to it’s maximum. This move puts Ford in a much tighter squeeze and will probably help leverage the negotiations on behalf of the UAW. Also, the public eye will frown upon the big 3 by laying off workers. On top of losing sales and market they will hurt their reputation which will be the costlier of them all. It seems that the UAW is prepping for the long haul. Let’s go workers!!!

      I just hope that this gets resolved quickly and favorably because all of the industry (supply chain all the way to the bottom) will hurt because of this.

    • @[email protected]
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      469 months ago

      You shouldn’t anyway. Their vehicles are terrible.

      I had a 2003 Ranger that was in tip top shape. I was the only owner and regularly took it in for oil changes and maintenance. Sitting at a stop sign one night on my way home from work and the engine starts knocking out of the blue. Piston fucked and the engine is completely shot. That was like 1-2 months after a full tune up.

      My mom had a Ford Focus. As soon as it was out of warranty, everything on that car went south. The electronics, the transmission, everything. That car was a massive piece of shit.

      tl;dr - Ford fucking sucks.

      • @[email protected]
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        389 months ago

        That kind of stuff happens with all brands though… Heck, we would sometimes have brand new cars needing an engine replacement at the dealership I worked at back in the day (Nissan around 2009).

        • Kushan
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          239 months ago

          I have had a couple of Fords over the years and never experienced anything beyond usual wear and tear. My brother has been driving Focuses for nearly 2 decades now and swears by them.

          Not defending ford as a company here, but just sharing my own anecdotes.

          • @[email protected]
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            29 months ago

            I think they’ve since sorted the issues that plagued mine and my mom’s cars. Her Focus was like a 2002 or something and I think it was one of the first versions. It was just crazy how many things went wrong in such a short window.

            In regards to my Ranger, it was a period where some of their engines were basically lemons.

            My brother had a Pontiac Grand Am back in the day that had similar catastrophic issues. Basically all of the electronics failed and they had to rip the entire dash apart. Engine issues too. Even with repairs, the car was a disaster waiting to happen.

            The gaps in quality sometimes can be wild. Tons of super reliable Ford F-150s, but then you get some models that are just total lemons.

            • @[email protected]
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              9 months ago

              Indeed. Ford made many improvements to their vehicles in 2012 and 2013 to compete with the international brands selling in the US market. It seems it wasn’t enough since Ford decided to cease sedan manufacturing in the US. Now they only manufacture trucks, SUVs, and Mustangs.

      • netburnr
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        199 months ago

        Weird. My 2009 Ranger with 160k miles still pulls its 31 inch tires at over 90mph to the beach just fine. My old Focist ST took a hell of a beating cause I drove it like it was stolen and it was fine too.

        But because you must be right. All ford’s suck.

      • @SCB
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        129 months ago

        Counterpoint: drove a 92 Ford ranger into the fucking ground. That truck was an absolute soldier. I took shit care of it, my neighbor cut my fuel line and I held it together with a clamp and a sock, I got in 4 accidents in it.

        Absolute beast of a vehicle.

        • @FordBeeblebrox
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          39 months ago

          The only thing that stopped my 92 Ranger was another vehicle hitting it at high speed, otherwise it’d still be choochin up the mountains today. Got an Edge and once again only real problems are impact based from a crash but it goes everywhere

        • @grue
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          39 months ago

          My '96 Ranger is at a quarter million miles and still going.

      • @[email protected]
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        69 months ago

        I’ve heard stories like that from most car brands. Not saying you are the exception, I’m saying the exception is a reliable car that doesn’t suck for almost anyone, like a 90s-00s Toyota

        • @orrk
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          39 months ago

          Interestingly, the German mandated car inspections are a good source for reliability, and Fords are almost always in the top few spots in terms of “severe faults found on the car”, and it’s not like other foreign, or even American cars have this problem at the inspections… mainly Fords

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            Oh, I’m not claiming Ford’s are good cars, their ecotech engines are incredibly prone to dying early on due to their faulty design. With that said, I’ve heard stories where Chrysler engines where great, but the Mercedes transmissions they came with were terrible. Then there are terrible reliability stories from Lancia, Lotus, and Alfa Romeo. Chevrolet has had some flops as well.

      • @camr_on
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        29 months ago

        My ranger did almost the exact same thing, ended up being totaled. Part of me wants another one but I don’t like the new style and the used old rangers are so expensive, especially considering the fact that my first one just up and died lol

      • @DarthBueller
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        9 months ago

        I’m thinking of the mid-2000s Exploder that had a widely-known transmission fault that would put the tranny into a permanent fault mode where the transmission light would flash and the gearing was noisy/weird. Ford’s response was “out of warranty, sorry not sorry”. Drove it nearly 100k miles like that. EDIT: forgot about the Focus that wrapped its hood around my windshield when I was in the left lane of a highway going 80 mph.

  • @TheMusicalFruit
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    9 months ago

    Not defending Ford here. But we need to be supporting union workers by choosing union made products and services. Those that are saying they won’t buy a Ford now, that’s your choice, but I hope you’re doing your research and at least considering other automobiles that are union instead. Here is a 2023 list of all the UAW built vehicles: https://uaw.org/solidarity_magazine/2023-uaw-union-built-vehicle-guide/amp/

    • @captainlezbian
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      259 months ago

      Yeah I wanted a Chevy bolt because that’s the union made electric compact. I won’t buy a struck vehicle but I’ll never buy a non union new vehicle if I can help it. Purchasing non union products is the same as purchasing products from companies retaliating against a union, the only difference is the retaliators haven’t won yet.

    • @hihellobyeoh
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      29 months ago

      Is it bad that I would rather buy a vehicle from the 90’s because it doesn’t have all this bs in it that 1. makes it harder to repair myself and 2. Just feels weird to drive (mainly talking the fly by wire style that modern cars are using, I want to feel the feedback on my gas pedal).

      • @grue
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        9 months ago

        No, it’s definitely not bad to think that.

        (Source: I own four cars made in the '90s, for much the same reason.)

  • @[email protected]
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    689 months ago

    Oh, wow! That’ll show those rascally workers! I’m sure the strikes will conclude uneventfully now!

    /s

  • @Weslee
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    669 months ago

    If they can prove the layoffs are retaliation, can’t the workers sure them? Or does that only apply to the initial action of unionisation?

    • @mind
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      449 months ago

      deleted by creator

          • @grue
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            9 months ago

            The US is a first world country… by definition, because “first world” means “NATO,” not “high on the human development index.”

      • @evidences
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        359 months ago

        There are actually protections for striking according to the NLRB “depending on the purposes and means of the strike action.”

      • @Rebels_Droppin
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        289 months ago

        I believe if it’s an unsanctioned wildcat strike they can fire without it being retaliation, but if it’s a strike backed by the NLRB they have to prove it isn’t retaliation and I don’t think the days gone by an official strike counts here. I could be wrong but that is what I remember about wildcat strike differences

      • @[email protected]
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        159 months ago

        That’s interesting - in Australia we do have ‘protected action’ that can be taken when bargaining. Basically each workplace in a union has a vote to strike (endorsed by the fair work commission) and if it gets up any action taken is protected from retaliation.

      • @Jonna
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        19 months ago

        It depends on the kind of strike. Workers that strike over a company’s unfair labor practice are protected from permanent replacements. This is not that tho. While they are far apart, I don’t think they can accuse the companies of refusing to negotiate.

        Of course if the union wins the strike then no replacement.

  • Flying Squid
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    549 months ago

    And this is one of the reasons they’re striking in the first place.

  • @oldbaldgrumpy
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    89 months ago

    Poking the UAW with a stick may not work the way Ford thinks it will.

    • @AEsheron
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      59 months ago

      Toyota man. Shit never stops running if you even sort of take care of it. If you’re trying to stay with US built then most of their cars sold in US are made here. In 2017 their US sales were:

      Built in America 56%
      Built in Canada 25%
      Built in Mexico 6%
      Built outside N.A. 13% (Mostly Lexus Models)

  • @[email protected]
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    -799 months ago

    Making cars in the US makes no sense. The cost of living is too high. It’s much easier to make them in Mexico and ship them.

    • @ALavaPulsar
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      739 months ago

      If they want their new EVs to be eligible federal tax credit, the cars need to undergo final assembly in the US. Not to mention we just went through a pandemic that showed us the weaknesses of shipping all our manufacturing to third world countries.

            • @Harvey656
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              119 months ago

              Then you have no idea why things NEED to be made here too. Everywhere needs jobs regardless of the country. People need money to spend on things, old things need replaced with new ones sometimes, and the economy fails with no jobs at all. Your comments are short sighted and fail to recognize to unique circumstances of the USA and its needs as you are not a citizen, you don’t know how it actually is here or why Union jobs are important to the working class.

              You read too many sensational ‘America Bad’ articles and it shows.

    • @alvvayson
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      559 months ago

      That makes sense for a techbro or a financebro, but turning the blue collar labour force into a horde of minimum wage slaves serving coffee and delivering UPS packages isn’t exactly the future that those people want.

    • @[email protected]
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      189 months ago

      Yeah, we shouldn’t make anything expensive in the US. We should make them abroad and then the unemployed hordes will buy those goods!

      Your statement is too stupid to be anything but a troll.

    • @[email protected]
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      79 months ago

      You’d have a point, if it weren’t for the fact that you’re targeting the wrong issues.

    • @[email protected]
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      -189 months ago

      Bingo

      Watch ford agree to terms and then just close the plants afterwards once they have setup new ones elsewhere

      • @marx2k
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        219 months ago

        Automobile manufacturing plants aren’t pop up apple stores

        • @Ducks
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          8 months ago

          deleted by creator

          • @[email protected]
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            99 months ago

            Idiots clearly have never even be to SE Michigan, let alone Detroit, and have no clue how automotive supply chains work. Just about every factory and industrial site from Flint to Toledo is producing parts that either get put into Big 3 cars directly or are used to make equipment that are then used. They have had 30 years of NAFTA to figure out how to move that complicated supply chain to Mexico with success, but are still reliant on American industrial might.