Matamoros strike threatens to shut down North American auto industry - Page 4 - Politics Forum.org | PoFo

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#14989423
ckaihatsu wrote:Ehhhh, I can't get on board, because I do support *standards* for any schooling, like a 'core curriculum'. I saw a video on 'unschooling', which is certainly enlightened, but I don't think those decentralized approaches are rigorous-enough when it comes to the content.


The public could easily set benchmarks and standards, they're already in place for private and home schools and homeschoolers do better on standardized tests than publicly educated kids.

If you just want to dictate curriculum in order to indoctrinate children with your ideology then I doubt very many people will be on board with that.


Okay, name one.


Amtrak is the first that comes to mind but there are dozens in the US.



Block-grants-to-parents, then.



No, it's nothing like a block grant. You should look up what a block grant is because you obviously have no idea what you're talking about.


The vouchers are meant to be 'spent' at privatized charter schools, right? Then it's *privatization*.


Like what the hell? I just clearly explained that that is absolutely not what it is.


Okay, you did mention non-for-profit before, but I'll have to say that such is *contrived* since the private sector will always want to *commodify* whatever industry, whether health care or education, etc.


It's not contrived, it's a restriction to prevent exactly that.


No, you can't just square the blame solely at the state, because it's just doing the demands of big business


The state just does the demands of the oligarchy and where you have a state you have an oligarchy. It's an iron law.
#14989577
ckaihatsu wrote:
Ehhhh, I can't get on board, because I do support *standards* for any schooling, like a 'core curriculum'. I saw a video on 'unschooling', which is certainly enlightened, but I don't think those decentralized approaches are rigorous-enough when it comes to the content.



Sivad wrote:
The public could easily set benchmarks and standards, they're already in place for private and home schools and homeschoolers do better on standardized tests than publicly educated kids.



I think I *have* heard of that result, and that's good. I'm not a capitalist-state supporter, so I'm not ideologically fixed to that mode of education as being 'the only way'. These things are *relative*, politically, so I'd prefer more-enlightened approaches, but I'd also defend public schooling over the *privatization* of the same.


Sivad wrote:
If you just want to dictate curriculum in order to indoctrinate children with your ideology then I doubt very many people will be on board with that.



Hmmm, that's just being unkind. No, this is what 'core curriculum' means:



United States

Core curriculum

At the undergraduate level, individual college and university administrations and faculties sometimes mandate core curricula, especially in the liberal arts. But because of increasing specialization and depth in the student's major field of study, a typical core curriculum in higher education mandates a far smaller proportion of a student's course work than a high school or elementary school core curriculum prescribes.

Among the best known and most expansive core curricula programs at leading American colleges and universities are that of Columbia University and the University of Chicago. Both can take up to two years to complete without advanced standing, and are designed to foster critical skills in a broad range of academic disciplines, including: the social sciences, humanities, physical and biological sciences, mathematics, writing and foreign languages.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curriculu ... curriculum



---


Sivad wrote:
Amtrak is the first that comes to mind but there are dozens in the US.



Okay, thanks.


Sivad wrote:
No, it's nothing like a block grant. You should look up what a block grant is because you obviously have no idea what you're talking about.



Here it is:



Block grant (United States) refers to a grant-in-aid of a specified amount from the Federal government of the United States to individual states and local governments to help support various broad purpose programs, such as law enforcement, social services, public health, and community development.[1] Block grants have less oversight from the federal government and provide flexibility to each state in terms of designing and implementing programs.[2]:9 Block grants, categorical grants, and general revenue sharing are three types of federal government grants-in-aid programs.[1][Notes 1]



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_gra ... ted_States)



So my point stands -- education vouchers are akin to block-grants-to-parents, which is equivalent to *privatization* / marketization, instead of keeping education within *state* administration, which should be preferred.


---


ckaihatsu wrote:
The vouchers are meant to be 'spent' at privatized charter schools, right? Then it's *privatization*.



Sivad wrote:
Like what the hell? I just clearly explained that that is absolutely not what it is.



But you're *incorrect*.


---


ckaihatsu wrote:
Okay, you did mention non-for-profit before, but I'll have to say that such is *contrived* since the private sector will always want to *commodify* whatever industry, whether health care or education, etc.



Sivad wrote:
It's not contrived, it's a restriction to prevent exactly that.



I'm saying that your reformist mindset / approach is *insufficient* in the real world because private-property interests will *always* be looking to privatize and commodify the service of education away from the state -- a dynamic that's *undesirable*. NPO-ing everything is *impossible* within a system that runs on the incentive of *profit*.


Sivad wrote:
The state just does the demands of the oligarchy and where you have a state you have an oligarchy. It's an iron law.



Exactly. You're making my point *for* me -- there's no way you can champion NPOs as a solution when oligarchies actually reign in the real world.
#14990015
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/0 ... i-f22.html


State and corporate attacks escalate against workers in Matamoros, Mexico

By Andrea Lobo
22 February 2019

Amid the ongoing rebellion against the unions and companies by auto-parts workers in Matamoros, Mexico, the ruling class is escalating its efforts to crack down on the workers.

The autoworkers at Fisher Dynamics who had sent a video the previous week to the WSWS in support of the February 9 demonstration were recently assaulted by union thugs.

In addition, on Monday morning, dozens of riot police violently broke up a picket line of striking workers at Bright Finishing in Matamoros, injuring a worker and arresting a young person who was present.

Image
Police crack down against picket line at Bright Finishing (Credit La Frontera Dice)

Over 50 “maquiladora” plants in Matamoros have agreed to the raise and bonus demanded by striking workers, while 20 companies are still on strike in the city, according to the Labor Secretariat. The maquiladora associations, which largely represent US companies, are threatening a massive counter-attack involving tens of thousands of layoffs. On February 14, business groups called for the “immediate intervention” of both the government of Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) and the trade-union bureaucracy to suppress resistance by workers.

The recent attacks against workers in Mexico must be taken as a serious warning of the repression being prepared by the ruling class against the growing militancy and radicalization of workers and youth internationally.

On Thursday, the Mexican Association of Car Distributors warned that the strikes are crippling business. “That is the case with the steering-wheel plant KSS [Joyson], the largest maker in the world, and it’s installed here in Matamoros, supplying virtually all brands. The disturbance in that plant risks the entire North American auto industry.”

Last Sunday, the US Commerce Department indicated in a report to Trump that imports of cars constitute a threat to “national security.” While this report is aimed at underpinning threats of a trade war against the European Union and Japan, the conclusions are an indication that strikes and unrest in crucial industries across the country and hemisphere can cut across US geopolitical interests and will be considered a question of “national security” by the American state.

Seeing the hemisphere as a platform for waging economic and military confrontations against its rivals, US imperialism is ramping up its efforts to consolidate semi-colonial control over the region’s governments, workforces, markets and resources. This includes the present regime-change operation against the Venezuelan government, chiefly aimed at challenging the presence of Russia and China.

After declaring a state of emergency for the military to build a wall across the US-Mexico border, Trump declared in a speech last Monday that “the twilight hour of socialism has arrived in our hemisphere,” complaining that “socialism by its very nature does not respect borders.”

In Mexico, in response to denunciations by the Mexican Business Council (CMN) against the “illegal” strikes in Matamoros and blockades of crucial railways by protesting teachers in Michoacán, López Obrador declared Monday night: “We will all accept the maximum criteria that no one stands outside of or above the law. Let’s all behave well.” He added, “The business sector has a fundamental social role of investing, generating jobs and strengthening the public treasury and you are doing great and we will continue doing this together.”

On Tuesday, during a ceremony marking the 106 Anniversary of the Army, López Obrador told a military audience that, with the new National Guard, the existing military units and the federal police, “will work in a coordinated fashion and with perseverance to pacify the country.”

In 2017, nearly 60 percent of all foreign direct investment into Mexico came from the US and Canada, concentrated mostly in manufacturing and finance. The richest 10 percent of Mexicans control eighty percent of financial assets in the country, receive two-thirds of yearly income and possess 64 percent of all wealth. Since 2008, more than four million people have fallen under the official poverty line, adding up to 54 million people or nearly half of the population.

Such levels of economic inequality and the dependence of the Mexican ruling elites on US and Canadian imperialism are incompatible with democratic forms of rule.

The ruling class is basing its response to the growing resistance on the playbook of the 1970s and 1980s. At the time, Stalinist, Guevaraist, Pabloite and other petty-bourgeois nationalist movements, including the trade unions, politically disarmed radicalized workers, peasants, and youth by subordinating them to one or another section of the bourgeoisie. Washington and the local oligarchies then installed far-right regimes and backed terrorist military and paramilitary forces to kill, torture and “disappear” tens of thousands.

As millions of workers enter the class struggle and increasingly look across borders to link their fights, the crucial historical lesson of the bloody defeats throughout the twentieth century comes to bear: the growing movement of the working class needs to be armed with an independent and revolutionary program to overthrow capitalism across the world and establish socialism.

Copyright © 1998-2019 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved
#14990342
SSDR wrote:
@ckaihatsu, No one ever said that you didn't need to plagiarize.

A posted article is okay, but for you to categorize it like that makes you prejudice.



SSDR, as before, please keep your opinionating to yourself. You're not adding anything to the topic or to the thread.

I'm *not* 'prejudiced' just by adding news articles about the ongoing Matamoros workers situation here on this thread.
#14990346
Rancid wrote:Has the auto industry collapsed yet?


It's gotta be impacting production on the US side, they do make a lot of auto parts down there that the US plants use and the Mexican Business Council says the strike is costing $50 million a day. It's obviously not going to collapse the auto industry but there's no way the industry isn't feeling it.


“There’s a lot of unease over the fallout [of the strike],” Claudio X Gonzalez, a former president of the Mexican Business Council, recently told Reforma. “Losses are great because we’re living in a world that is very integrated with supply chains that have to be very efficient and effective, and when you stop them, things foul up and costs rise.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/ ... union-jobs
#14990361
Sivad wrote:
It's gotta be impacting production on the US side, they do make a lot of auto parts down there that the US plants use and the Mexican Business Council says the strike is costing $50 million a day. It's obviously not going to collapse the auto industry but there's no way the industry isn't feeling it.


“There’s a lot of unease over the fallout [of the strike],” Claudio X Gonzalez, a former president of the Mexican Business Council, recently told Reforma. “Losses are great because we’re living in a world that is very integrated with supply chains that have to be very efficient and effective, and when you stop them, things foul up and costs rise.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/ ... union-jobs


Sure, conceivably there could a shortage. However, for now, this is just speculation. I've not seen evidence of a parts shortage affecting production. FYI, I frequent auto enthusiast websites, lots of these sites have inside sources at the auto manufacturers. They tend to get a good read on what's happen on the inside, including parts shortages. I've not seen anything bubble up on that front either. Again, the business news sites are also not reporting a parts shortage, these sites are usually very keen to report shortages early. They too, tend to have inside sources.

The point here is, right now, all of these socialist news sites are just making stuff up and/or wildly speculating just to try and drum up noise and make this sound far large than it really is.

Side note, you guys also realize that companies tend to multi-source parts? They do this to mitigate strikes, and natural disasters. Lots of shit has to go wrong before there's a parts shortage. I use to work in a manufacturing setting, part of my job was to evaluate second and third sources for the same part. Exactly to mitigate issues like this.
#14990365
Rancid wrote:Sure, conceivably there could a shortage. However, for now, this is just speculation. I've not seen evidence of a parts shortage affecting production. FYI, I frequent auto enthusiast websites, lots of these sites have inside sources at the auto manufacturers. They tend to get a good read on what's happen on the inside, including parts shortages. I've not seen anything bubble up on that front either. Again, the business news sites are also not reporting a parts shortage, these sites are usually very keen to report shortages early. They too, tend to have inside sources.


A media blackout can't be ruled out because the business press is incredibly hostile to labor but I think you're right that they would be reporting on it if there was a big shortage because that would effect stock prices and the business press is even more beholden to the money men than to the industrialists and the money men primarily just want any and all information they can get to stay ahead of the curve.

The point here is, right now, all of these socialist news sites are just making stuff up and/or wildly speculating just to try and drum up noise and make this sound far large than it really is.


It's definitely got a hefty heaping of bullshit, all news is at least 50% propaganda.

Side note, you guys also realize that companies tend to multi-source parts? They do this to mitigate strikes, and natural disasters. Lots of shit has to go wrong before there's a parts shortage. I use to work in a manufacturing setting, part of my job was to evaluate second and third sources for the same part. Exactly to mitigate issues like this.


That's a really good point, they have insulated themselves against this very problem but still I would think it has to be appreciably affecting production costs, at least somewhat.
#14990375
@ckaihatsu, No, you're not adding anything to the topic. You never state your own opinions, as I have mentioned before. All you do is copy and paste. It's like talking to a fucking robot lol.

You are prejudiced, but I never said you're prejudiced because "adding news articles about the ongoing Matamoros workers situation here on this thread." Twisting words as usual lmfaooo.
#14990965

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/0 ... a-f27.html




Ford production crippled by Mexican workers’ strike

By Jerry White
27 February 2019

The strike by tens of thousands of maquiladora workers in Matamoros, Mexico, across the border from Brownsville, Texas, has had a crippling effect on production at major auto assembly plants in the United States and Canada, which are owned by Ford and other automakers.

After concealing this fact for more than six weeks after the January 12 strike began, the news media in the US is finally acknowledging the impact of the walkouts by 70,000 Mexican workers at foreign-based companies that supply steering wheels, seat belts and other parts to the Detroit automakers.

This impact on production was first reported by the World Socialist Web Site on January 19, based on reports from workers at Ford’s Flat Rock assembly plant in suburban Detroit. Workers told the WSWS that the company was temporarily suspending production due to a shortage of steering wheels caused by the walkout in Mexico.

On Tuesday, the Detroit Free Press, which has very close ties both to the auto companies and the United Auto Workers (UAW), wrote, “A labor strike in Mexico forced Ford Motor Co. to build Mustang cars and Explorer SUVs with temporary steering wheels and hold thousands of the vehicles in nearby parking lots awaiting parts, the Free Press has learned.

“While waiting, Ford sent approximately 3,200 factory workers home for two weeks of unplanned down time at the Flat Rock Assembly Plant south of Detroit, the company confirmed Monday. In addition, workers at the Oakville Assembly Plant in Ontario were sent home for three days while waiting for parts to install in the Ford Flex and Lincoln Nautilus.”

The newspaper reported that the supply of steering wheels had resumed as of Monday and that Ford planned to inform its Flat Rock workers that they would remain on two shifts for two weeks in April to make up for lost production.

“We had a parts shortage due to a supplier issue,” Ford spokeswoman Kelli Felker told the Free Press. “It affected Flat Rock and Mustang, specifically. The Explorer was affected, and we did continue to build. We did not take down time at the Chicago Assembly Plant. We will be upfitting those vehicles affected by the [parts] shortage, just like Mustang.” She added, “The situation is resolved. Parts are flowing.”

While the statement by Ford did not mention the strikes in Mexico, the Free Press said its investigation pointed to “Mexico as the culprit.” The newspaper pointed to Swedish-based Autoliv, which has plants in Matamoros and produces steering wheels.

The two Detroit daily newspapers (the Free Press and the Detroit News), along with the rest of the news media in the US and Canada, conducted a news blackout on the Matamoros strike. The media has been joined by the UAW and the Unifor union in Canada. This was driven by the fear that US and Canadian workers would emulate the actions of the Mexican workers who revolted against the corporate-controlled unions and organized independent strike committees to spread the strike across more than 45 factories.

What struck terror in the hearts of the corporate media mouthpieces and union executives most was the fact that the Matamoros workers issued calls for US workers to join their fight against the global automakers.

The promotion of the lie that Mexican workers are docile and satisfied with their miserable conditions and are offering themselves up as cheap labor to “steal” American jobs, has long been the stock-in-trade of the unions, Donald Trump and the Democratic Party. As US and Canadian workers see Mexican workers fighting back, they increasingly understand that the Mexican workers are not their enemies but their class brothers and sisters fighting the same global corporations and pro-company unions.

The striving by workers to unify across borders was highlighted by the video sent by striking workers at the Michigan-based Fisher Dynamics plant in Matamoros expressing their solidarity with the February 9 demonstration against GM plant closings organized by the WSWS Autoworker Newsletter and the Steering Committee of the Coalition of Rank-and-File Committees.

The Free Press and the Detroit News were silent about the February 9 demonstration, which called for US and Canadian workers to build their own rank-and-file committees, independent of the unions, and explicitly called for the unity of all North American workers in opposition to the anti-Mexican campaign of the UAW and Unifor.

Now that several of the strikes have been settled, the media has begun to report on the impact of the strike. At the same time, industry analysts are warning about the dangers of an internationally coordinated struggle against the global automakers, which have long pitted workers against each other in a race to the bottom.

“These strikes underscore how highly integrated the supply lines are,” Harley Shaiken, a professor at the University of California Berkeley, told the Free Press. “Most customers prefer steering wheels, so when you get this kind of disruption, it can paralyze production across North America. If you have labor unrest in Mexico, it impacts the U.S. And you have unrest now because you’ve had suppressed wages for decades.”

Jeoff Burris, founder of Plymouth-based Advanced Purchasing Dynamics, a supply chain consultant to auto suppliers primarily in North America, told the Free Press, “Companies worldwide look to Mexico as a low-cost labor region that can easily and efficiently ship finished components throughout the U.S. and Canada.”

Burris added, “It’s not routine for Mexico to have labor disruptions that upset the making of vehicles… My concern is the new Mexico administration has kind of unleashed a genie in a bottle. They’ve built a huge amount of expectations. Those expectations are similar to what happened in the US in the 1960s and ‘70s, when strikes were very prevalent in the automotive industry. That’s the thing I look at.”

The new administration of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has in fact done everything it can to contain opposition while proposing to expand the number of free trade zones along the border.

Obrador’s promise to double the minimum wage in more expensive communities along the US border to 176.2 pesos, or $9.28 a day, did not affect workers in the Matamoros factories who were already making the minimum wage. This sparked widespread outrage against the unions and corporations and the wave of strikes demanding “20/32,” or a 20 percent pay raise and one-time 32,000 pesos ($1,662) bonus.

Over the last several weeks, the maquiladora owners, the unions and state authorities have stepped up the repression of strikers, including thug attacks by union bureaucrats and mass layoffs and victimization of strike leaders. This underscores the necessity of US and Canadian autoworkers coming to the defense of Mexican workers and establishing the closest links with them.

Two weeks before the Free Press article acknowledging the production slowdown in the US and Canada, a Flat Rock worker told the WSWS Autoworker Newsletter, “Astonishing that the walkout in Mexico, and particularly Ford's supplier of steering wheels SHUT THEM DOWN and there is zero coverage in any major media source. Not even the Detroit News/Free Press.

“Absolutely incredible how much power the worker has when it is exercised,” he concluded, expressing his solidarity with the striking workers south of the border. “We need to stand united and, like our brave Mexican amigos, be willing to stand up and walk out,” he said, referring to the upcoming contracts for 150,000 GM, Ford and Chrysler workers whose contracts expire this September.

Copyright © 1998-2019 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved
#14991913
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/0 ... a-m02.html


“The union abandoned us and allowed for management to blacklist us”

US, Canadian and Mexican workers denounce mass firings of Matamoros strikers

By our reporters
2 March 2019

Mexican auto parts and other “maquiladora” corporations are firing workers in retaliation for launching a wave of wildcat strikes that brought the Mexican border town of Matamoros to a standstill. The firings are a desperate attempt to block the growth of the strike movement, which has now spread to other cities along the border and in the country’s interior.

The president for the state of Tamaulipas’ branch of the Employer Confederation of the Mexican Republic (Coparmex), told Expreso on Thursday that 4,000 workers have already been fired or laid off since the strikes began.

Image
Police crack down against picket line at Bright Finishing [Credit: La Frontera Dice]

If these firings are not reversed, the corporations will be throwing thousands of workers and their families into desperate poverty.

Matamoros workers want to notify their US and Canadian counterparts about the jobs onslaught. Speaking to the World Socialist Web Site Autoworker Newsletter, Juan, an Autoliv worker, said, “About 100 people were fired at the beginning, but so far that’s it.”

Another Autoliv worker said that no information is being made available of the overall scale of firings. “However, reprisals continue. For example, they want to fire you for everything now. This is aimed at those who led the strikes last month. There is more pressure on our work, and they accelerated production.”

The corporations are targeting those workers identified with leading the strikes. Rosalinda, a Kearfott worker who was fired alongside roughly 30 other militant workers, told the WSWS, “Currently, I have some mental ease. The environment at work was hostile and heavy. I feel liberated but with many questions about the future of industry and, more than anything else, about our future.”

She said that at Kearfott, which had threatened to close its plant but continues operating, “there will be more firings tomorrow, and they will be the coworkers who were demonstrating during the strike.” She added, “We know this because their access to internet accounts and offices at the plant have already been denied. They did the same to us, and the supervisors where hostile toward us, while the union was supporting the company.

“The union abandoned us and allowed for management to blacklist us, so that we don’t find a new job.”

Blacklisting, or “boletinando,” has been reported by many fired workers in Matamoros who say the companies have made secret databases to prevent strikers from being re-hired.

At Inteva, a worker told the WSWS, “They are going to fire personnel at these companies, but that won’t make us back down… There are cards on the table, and we have to see who plays them better.”

Last week, workers at Polytech wrote on social media, “Many are being hired to fire those who struck, and the company plans to change its name to cut salaries in the future. This week many have been fired.”

On February 16 at Industrias Tricon, several workers denounced guards for entering bathrooms and demanding ID numbers in an effort to intimidate workers. One worker was written up by management for giving a bone to a dog during a break in violation of an invented policy against “throwing away food.”

“They are looking for anything to fire people and not pay the bonus of 32,000 pesos, which will be given in four parts, taking away 2,000 pesos for taxes from each deposit of 8,000 pesos,” one Industrias Tricon worker wrote.

At Parker, immediately after signing the bonus and raise, the company fired over 100 workers. Workers responded by denouncing the company: “We are being paid 60 percent or less of the severance pay without the bonus.”

About 250 autoworkers who participated in the initial wildcat strikes at Tridonex were fired at the end of January and not given the bonus the company agreed to.

The corporations are also threatening to punish the entire city by moving production and cutting 50,000 jobs.

Eduardo Solís, president of the Mexican Association of the Auto Industry (AMIA), said Monday that “with those new agreements, [companies] don’t see a continuation for their plants in the medium and long term; that is why they are already thinking about taking them to other parts of Mexico and the world.”

There were 800 layoffs at Joyson Safety Systems, the largest steering wheel plant in the world, shortly after the strike began there in mid-February. The Coca-Cola bottling plant on strike also announced that it would close down the plant and lay off its 700 workers. Strikers are occupying the facilities and militantly holding trucks there and blocking Coca-Cola trucks that enter the city.

The WSWS Autoworker Newsletter campaigned at auto plants in Michigan to demand that all fired workers in Mexico be re-hired. Many US and Canadian workers gave statements of support to workers in Matamoros facing victimization.

A young Ford worker in the Detroit area said, “It is good to hear that strikes are spreading in Mexico. They have been exploited way too long, and it is good they are fighting back. I say, keep on going and stay strong. What you are going through happened in the 1920s and 1930s. It didn’t stop them then, and it won’t now.

“All over the world workers working for these transnational companies are saying they are not going to take it anymore. You have seen strikes in Europe and the yellow vest protests in France. I support everyone who wants a better life. Workers are saying we are making all this money for the corporations, we want some of it.”

An Oshawa worker at one of the GM plants slated for closure called for a joint strike of all auto and auto parts workers across North America. “We need to hit GM where it hurts and show them we have livelihoods to fulfill and families to feed.” The worker reported the afternoon shift at his plant was sent home early because the strikes in Mexico have led to a shortage of steering wheels.

A worker from Fiat-Chrysler in Windsor, Ontario, said, “Every day I wake up and say I wish workers all across North America were as brave as in Mexico. I am Italian. For anyone to say one thing about one race or nationality bothers me.

“I would tell the workers in Mexico, do you want a better quality of life? You have to stand up and start somewhere.” The worker was outraged by the attempt by the unions to target Mexican workers by calling for a boycott of GM vehicles built in Mexico. “What Unifor is doing is a hate crime. Are they above the law? How could they allow what happened at the rally in Windsor with the woman wearing the sombrero,” mocking Mexican workers.

“I think Unifor knew about the plant closings four years ago. The commercials [calling for a boycott of Mexican vehicles] are disgusting. Unifor isn’t going to save anything. What divides us is class. Look at the corporations. Look at the billions of dollars they are making. They are blaming the closure of the Oshawa plant on Mexico. No! The money is going to the shareholders.” The worker said the Windsor Fiat-Chrysler plant had also been down intermittently due to parts shortages.

“We were off all last week. This week they told us our production was being cut. I am sure it is due to parts. They don’t want to tell us about the Matamoros strikes because they don’t want to start a revolution here.”

Copyright © 1998-2019 World Socialist Web Site - All rights reserved
#14991927
To @SSDR's point. Yes, this is a news forum, but it's usually better/interesting to state a little personal opinion/analysis along with the news. Otherwise people won't engage in the thread. As you have seen, very few people are commenting here compared to other news threads.

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