Menu
UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting

UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting

UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting
  • Football
    • 2024 Notre Dame Football Schedule
    • 2024 Notre Dame Roster
    • 2024 Notre Dame Coaching Staff
    • Injury News & Updates
    • Notre Dame Football Depth Charts
    • Notre Dame Point Spreads & Betting Odds
    • Notre Dame Transfers
    • NFL Fighting Irish
    • Game Archive
    • Player Archive
    • Past Seasons & Results
  • Recruiting
    • Commits
    • News & Rumors
    • Class of 2018 Commit List
    • Class of 2019 Commit List
    • Class of 2020 Commit List
    • Class of 2021 Commit List
    • Archives
  • History
    • Notre Dame Bowl History
    • Notre Dame NFL Draft History
    • Notre Dame Football ESPN GameDay History
    • Notre Dame Heisman Trophy Winners
    • Notre Dame Football National Championships
    • Notre Dame Football Rivalries
    • Notre Dame Stadium
    • Touchdown Jesus
  • Basketball
  • Forums
    • Chat Room
    • Football Forum
    • Open Forum
    • Basketball Board
    • Ticket Exchange
  • Videos
    • Notre Dame Basketball Highlights
    • Notre Dame Football Highlights
    • Notre Dame Football Recruiting Highlights
    • Notre Dame Player Highlights
    • Hype Videos
  • Latest News
  • Gear
  • About
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our RSS Feeds
    • Community Rules
    • Privacy Policy
  • RSS
  • YouTube
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Home > Forums > The Open Forum
Login | Register
Upvote this post.
0
Downvote this post.

The dockworkers union requesting restrictions against automation is interesting to me.

Author: iairishcheeks (27316 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 8:39 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

Are guaranteed jobs for a small sector of workers a good thing overall?

Replies to: The dockworkers union requesting restrictions against automation is interesting to me.


Thread Level: 2

Sounds similar to the Teamsters manifesto on automated vehicles.

Author: Rooney (5917 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 1:26 pm on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

The number #1 job in about 75% of all States is truck driver. If the trucking industry embraces AVs on wide scale, where do all these jobs go?

No worries. The Teamsters have a solution. All AVs should still be required to have a human operator say the Teamsters. Essentially paid passengers, napping, watching movies and snacking. Sweet gig.


"I didn't come here to take part. I came here to take over."
Thread Level: 3

Yeah, that seems to be where we're going.

Author: iairishcheeks (27316 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 3:00 pm on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

But as soon as the AVs are widely available, the drivers will have zero bargaining power. But, as Joe told the coal miners, the truck drivers should just learn to code.

Thread Level: 2

Like it or not - this might help you with the facts

Author: jimbasil (52694 Posts - Joined: Nov 15, 2007)

Posted at 11:26 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

(no message)

Jack, he is a banker
and Jane, she is a clerk
Thread Level: 2

Fucking luddites

Author: LanceManion (7958 Posts - Joined: Jul 16, 2010)

Posted at 11:21 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

(no message)

Imposing corporate abuse, neglect and greed on deserving victims.
Thread Level: 2

They all should be fired immediately.

Author: PaND (2726 Posts - Joined: Dec 4, 2022)

Posted at 10:29 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

Biden sits on his hands.

Thread Level: 2

There's some precedence here. Look at New Jersey and pumping gas.

Author: jakers (13916 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 10:08 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

(no message)

Thread Level: 3

God, that is annoying.

Author: iairishcheeks (27316 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 10:45 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

(no message)

Thread Level: 4

I had friends at N.D. that I literally had to teach how to pump gas.

Author: jakers (13916 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 11:47 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

I kid you not. Quite a few of the ones from Jersey had never in their lives used a self-service station.

Thread Level: 5

Heh, I had the opposite problem, I went to NJ and didn't know the rule and got chewed out.

Author: iairishcheeks (27316 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 12:34 pm on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

(no message)

Thread Level: 2

It is akin to rent controls.

Author: Iggle (12629 Posts - Joined: Sep 14, 2007)

Posted at 9:08 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

(no message)

Thread Level: 2

I am not a robot 🔲.

Author: Irishize (7596 Posts - Joined: Dec 1, 2018)

Posted at 8:57 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

(no message)

Thread Level: 2

The adults weighed in on this...

Author: Nigel Tufnel (8036 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 8:45 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

Bentley Drivers of the World, Unite!
Meet the union boss making $900,000 who shut down U.S. ports.
By
The Editorial Board
Follow
Oct. 2, 2024 5:55 pm ET


If you haven’t heard of Harold Daggett, by all means you should. He’s the head of the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) who has shut down a good chunk of American commerce by leading his workers on strike and closing East and Gulf Coast ports.

Mr. Daggett could have been a character from the 1950s movie classic “On the Waterfront.” While presenting himself as a man of the people, the union chief made more than $900,000 last year. The New York Times reported in 2017 that he owned a 76-foot yacht and rode around in a Bentley luxury car.

Mr. Daggett’s union has a stranglehold on the ports, and as you can read nearby he intends to use it. “I will cripple you,” he said in an interview last month, referring to the ports and the U.S. economy. He means it.

The Justice Department has brought civil and criminal charges against Mr. Daggett for conspiring with mob bosses. While he won both cases, the ILA’s port stranglehold is a racket. Workers earn $39 an hour, often for doing little. This is one reason U.S. ports rank among the least efficient in the world. Mr. Daggett is demanding $69 an hour. In 2010 he said longshoremen should make more than $400,000. Some now do with overtime.

Containerization and automation have reduced port jobs, but the union’s contract entitles longshoremen to what is effectively a guaranteed income of tens of thousands of dollars regardless of whether they work. Some local union chiefs make hundreds of thousands of dollars for doing nothing. Most U.S. workers no doubt wish they could get paid for not working.

But look who’s locking arms with the Bentley-driving proletariat. None other than President Biden. “Now is not the time for ocean carriers to refuse to negotiate a fair wage for these essential workers while raking in record profits,” Mr. Biden said Tuesday. Is the 50% wage increase over six years that port employers have offered the union not fair?

Donald Trump was hardly better. “American workers should be able to negotiate for better wages, especially since the shipping companies are mostly foreign flag vessels,” the Republican declared. The reason most ocean carriers are foreign is because union work rules have rendered the U.S. shipbuilding and shipping industries uncompetitive globally.

Mr. Trump could be blaming Mr. Biden for refusing to invoke the Taft-Hartley Act to end the strike with an 80-day cooling off period. That’s what George W. Bush did to end a West Coast work stoppage in 2002.

One reason Congress passed Taft-Hartley in 1947 was to reduce the extortionary power that union chiefs held over the American economy. Mr. Daggett wants to return to those days, and Mr. Biden wants to help him.


Link: Daggett

'I define fear as standing across from Joe Louis and knowing he wants to go home early.' - Max Baer
Thread Level: 3

The reason most shipping lines register their ships in sketchy nations is to get away from the

Author: jimbasil (52694 Posts - Joined: Nov 15, 2007)

Posted at 11:23 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

rule of law. And way down at the bottom of any list is the cost of ports and pay for longshoremen.

The one thing shipping lines love is when they have cargo to bring to port, any port. They pass on their costs
on to the sender and receiver.


Jack, he is a banker
and Jane, she is a clerk
Thread Level: 3

Interesting, thanks for posting that.

Author: iairishcheeks (27316 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 10:45 am on Oct 3, 2024
View Single

(no message)

Close
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS