US US port strike by 45,000 dockworkers is all but certain to begin at midnight - A Rather Unique October Surprise

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.

L A

1727718692641.png

1 of 3 |
FILE - Shipping containers are stacked in the Port of New York and New Jersey in Elizabeth, N.J., May 20, 2021. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)
1727718719893.png
2 of 3 |
FILE - In this photo provided by the Georgia Ports Authority, Griff Lynch, President and CEO of the Georgia Ports Authority, provides an update on the Port of Savannah’s progress and future trajectory to 1,200 leaders from the maritime, supply chain, business and political sectors Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023, during the annual State of the Port event in Savannah, Ga. (Stephen B. Morton/Georgia Ports Authority via AP, File)
1727718744388.png
3 of 3 |
FILE - Containers are moved at the Port of New York and New Jersey in Elizabeth, N.J., on June 30, 2021. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

Updated 12:13 PM GMT-5, September 30, 2024
NEW YORK (AP) — The union representing U.S. dockworkers signaled that 45,000 members will walk off the job at midnight, kicking off a massive strike likely to shut down ports across the East and Gulf coasts.
The coming work stoppage threatens to significantly snarl the nation’s supply chain, potentially leading to higher prices and delays for households and businesses if it drags on for weeks. That’s because the strike by members of the International Longshoremen’s Association could cause 36 ports — which handle roughly half of the goods shipped into and out of the U.S. — to shutter operations.
ILA confirmed over the weekend that its members would hit the picket lines at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday. In a Monday update, the union continued to blame the United States Maritime Alliance, which represents the ports, for continuing to “to block the path” towards an agreement before the contract deadline.

“The Ocean Carriers represented by USMX want to enjoy rich billion-dollar profits that they are making in 2024, while they offer ILA Longshore Workers an unacceptable wage package that we reject,” ILA said in a prepared statement. “ILA longshore workers deserve to be compensated for the important work they do keeping American commerce moving and growing.”

ILA also accused the shippers of “killing their customers” with sizeable price increases for full containers over recent weeks. The union said that this will result increased costs for American consumers.

The Associated Press reached out to a USMX spokesperson for comment.
If drawn out, the strike would led would force businesses to pay shippers for delays and cause some goods to arrive late for peak holiday shopping season — potentially impacting delivery of anything from toys or artificial Christmas trees, to cars, coffee and vegetables. Americans could also face higher prices as retailers feel the supply squeeze.

ILA members are demanding higher wages and a total ban on the automation of cranes, gates and container-moving trucks used in the loading or unloading of freight.
The coming strike by the ILA workers will be the first by the union since 1977.
If a strike were deemed a danger to U.S. economic health, President Joe Biden could, under the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act, seek a court order for an 80-day cooling-off period. This would suspend the strike.
All eyes are on what, if any, action the adminstration might take — particularly just weeks ahead of a tight presidential election. But Biden has signaled that he will not exercise this power.
During an exchange with reporters on Sunday, Biden said “no” when asked if he planned to intervene in the potential work stoppage.

“Because it’s collective bargaining, I don’t believe in Taft-Hartley,” Biden said referring to a 1947 law that allows the president to intervene in labor disputes that threaten the nation’s health or safety.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Something poetic in an ur-boomer threatening to bring the whole country to ruin so he can go from 6 figure to 7 figure compensation.

Are there any unions that aren't just rackets?
i think the rail union had very reasonable demands when they threatened to strike a while ago. ironically, being in a union didn't even help them because Biden forced them to go back to work anyway

so, maybe actually no?
 
i think the rail union had very reasonable demands when they threatened to strike a while ago. ironically, being in a union didn't even help them because Biden forced them to go back to work anyway

so, maybe actually no?
The virgin "standing for the workers" union that buckles under Biden.
VS
The chad "boomers that build statues to themselves telling the country to go die if they don't get paid more"

BoomerStatue.jpg
 
it is pretty much all about the automation but the union will claim that it's all about salary as a smokescreen for public support. they have a lot of leverage so they'll probably end up getting most automation banned from the ports, setting back america's capabilities to modernize infrastructure for temporary and waning benefits

just unions doing union things
It's incredible that this was a plot line on The Wire 20 years ago, and nothing's changed.
 
The virgin "standing for the workers" union that buckles under Biden.
VS
The chad "boomers that build statues to themselves telling the country to go die if they don't get paid more"

View attachment 6477279
This is how you know they're scum. How much money did that fucking Union statue cost? Humility much? These people are willing to sink the country because they're angy that ports want to add automation that every other country has. The boomer right there is a perfect representation of the rot.
 
This is how you know they're scum. How much money did that fucking Union statue cost? Humility much? These people are willing to sink the country because they're angy that ports want to add automation that every other country has. The boomer right there is a perfect representation of the rot.
Apparently he also drives a Bentley and makes nearly $1 million a year, possibly has ties to the mob since he had a codefendant in a RICO case who ended up dead.

This is why I find unions so shitty, and for anyone saying this is a new thing, I can promise you it is not and even the UMWA had some mob ties a few decades back due to working closely with the teamsters. In concept a union is a good thing, a collective organized body of workers in each specialty field who advocates and bargains on behalf of those workers. In practice unions just present an easy ladder for criminally minded fuckheads to get filthy rich while maintaining some facade of helping the working man, and an even easier opportunity for lazy assholes to get paid to do nothing.
 
Apparently he also drives a Bentley and makes nearly $1 million a year, possibly has ties to the mob since he had a codefendant in a RICO case who ended up dead.

This is why I find unions so shitty, and for anyone saying this is a new thing, I can promise you it is not and even the UMWA had some mob ties a few decades back due to working closely with the teamsters. In concept a union is a good thing, a collective organized body of workers in each specialty field who advocates and bargains on behalf of those workers. In practice unions just present an easy ladder for criminally minded fuckheads to get filthy rich while maintaining some facade of helping the working man, and an even easier opportunity for lazy assholes to get paid to do nothing.
The concept is fine, it just lends itself to corruption and laziness. Because once you have power over a large group of people, you have power tripping retards up top that want more for less and think they can get away with literal murder. Yeah excuse me if i don't trust the guy that owns a Bentley and possibly had a guy killed to have the nations and his workers best interests at heart.
 
'Unions are communist. Russian = communist, remember? Unions are Russian assets and a threat to democracy.' The circle will be complete for the American left

I always found the fetishization strikes and unions by communists , in the west, ironic because communist countries had a history of shooting striking workers and not allowing them. As in the USSR, workers in Cuba and China don't even have the right to strike or form independent trade unions.
 
No, they're serious.

Ironic.


Because when contanerized freight became a thing in the 60's? They also tried to strike against it's implementation and wanted to keep the old style of stacking crates and sacks because it took more longshoremen to do that than just pluck the stuff up like lego bricks.
People forget just how labor intensive ship loading and unloading was before Conex containers.

Those containers made the modern trade systems work.
 
but there has been a bizarre focus on the financial compensation side and an insistence that workers should just "deal with" whatever pay they're getting, with less responsibility laid at the feet of the "opposing" side.
I’m wondering how many people holding that opinion are “Laptop Caste” limpwrists who are used to making $120k/yr for tippy-tapping on a keyboard in between babysitting pajeets.
 
I always found the fetishization strikes and unions by communists , in the west, ironic because communist countries had a history of shooting striking workers and not allowing them. As in the USSR, workers in Cuba and China don't even have the right to strike or form independent trade unions.
Unions in the West have always been useful idiots for communists for manipulation purposes. Only need one to join an union and play the long game to rise through the ranks to get into a position of power before causing trouble.
 
And of course, Kamala and all the Socialist/Communists that are voting for her out of desperation will just say that the price increase that's going to come from this is because of super market price gouging
Nah, the real commies are going to either stay home, vote uncommitted, or for a leftist 3rd party.
 
  • Disagree
Reactions: Thorndyke Special
It is a posibility. Altough many articles say that most people won't feel a difference until after a month of the strike starting, Helene hit the southeast very hard, and that place is basically the furthest away that you can get from a non-ILA port
LMAO, as if the major corporations never let every storm, shipwreck, stock market dip, strike, presidential election, change of the season, switch from standard to daylight savings time, or "just because it's friday", be a sufficient enough excuse to arbitrarily raise prices.
 
How long do these contracts last anyway? Kinda funny if it was a 20 year contract or smth and it just happened to fuck over the Dem by chance.
 
Back