seahorse 8 hours ago • 100%
We're not talking about calling cops. Also, I didn't make this.
cross-posted from: https://midwest.social/post/16916354 > SEATTLE, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Boeing bosses are staring down the barrel. > The twists and turns of the past week paint a picture of managers badly wrong-footed by the depth of fury among workers who tossed out a 25% pay increase deal and launched strike action. > "They probably didn't think that we had enough people for the strike," Kushal Varma, a Boeing mechanic, told Reuters. "But this is a movement of people who are willing to put their livelihoods on the line to get what's fair." > With little time to regroup, and pressure mounting, management enters a fresh week of talks to contain the crisis at the $97 billion U.S. aerospace champion (BA.N) > , opens new tab. > A week ago, Boeing executives believed they'd done enough to secure the pay deal with around 33,000 workers in Washington state, the heart of the company's global manufacturing operations, according to two people directly involved in the talks that have played out at Seattle's upscale Westin hotel. > The company's initial pay increase offer had been about 12%, said the people, who requested anonymity to discuss confidential and unreported details about the horse-trading, though that number gradually crept up during the weeks of negotiations. > But in an 11th-hour concession on Saturday, Sept. 7 to clinch the support of union leader Jon Holden and seal what they expected to be a swift resolution to the dispute, Boeing executives hiked the offer significantly to 25% and pledged to build the company's next commercial jet in the state, the people added. > "Much of it came together in the last four or five hours," Holden told Reuters after the tentative agreement was announced on Sept. 8, adding that he and Boeing management had worked until "the wee hours". > Boeing and the union hailed the deal as "historic" because of the record headline wage hike for the company and the first-of-its-kind plane commitment. It was a spectacular failure. > Three days later, 94% of members of Holden's International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) rejected the offer and 96% voted to strike. > Reuters interviews with more than 20 people, including Boeing officials, union leaders and factory workers, show how badly the U.S. aerospace champion underestimated the scale of the resentment felt by workers over cost-of-living pressures and pay agreements of previous years. > Boeing and the IAM declined to comment for this article. > The details of the deal's collapse also reveal how trust between Boeing and union leadership has eroded, complicating talks due to resume in coming days. > Two days after Boeing announced its offer, as union member frustration seeped into the media, commercial planes chief Stephanie Pope wrote an open letter to workers, saying the company had held nothing back and this was the best deal they would get. > CEO Kelly Ortberg followed up with an open letter the next day, telling workers that voting against the deal would send them down a path "where no one wins". > Rather than rallying the troops, the letters backfired, according to four workers who said many union members saw them as ultimatums. > "I thought they were unprofessional and threatening," said Josh King, a quality control inspector at a Boeing Seattle factory. > Boeing finance chief Brian West acknowledged the disconnect with staff. > "We had an unprecedented temporary agreement that was unanimously endorsed by union leadership. And over the last few days, it became very clear, loud and clear, with our union members that that offer didn't meet the mark," he told a Morgan Stanley conference at the beachside Ritz-Carlton in Dana Point, California on Friday. > In a conversation with a small group of investors on the sidelines of the event, West added that while Boeing had focused on the future plane pledge, workers were more concerned about their current wallets, according to a person who was present and requested anonymity as the discussion was private. > Reuters was unable to reach West for comment. > The 25% general wage increase offered was in line with gains won by other sectors such as autoworkers. Nonetheless, many Boeing workers have struggled to make ends meet over the years; since the last full wage deal in 2008, factory wages have lagged inflation, while healthcare and living costs have leapt. > UNION LEADER IN SPOTLIGHT > Boeing, which dominates the global planemaking market with European rival Airbus (AIR.PA) > , opens new tab, has been wrestling with production and safety crises since two deadly 737 MAX plane crashes in 2018 and 2019. > The latest upheaval was sparked by a door panel flying off a near-new 737 MAX plane in midair in January, prompting the exit of former CEO Dave Calhoun and a 30% drop in the company's share price this year. > As the new crunch labor talks loom, union chief Holden also finds himself under the microscope. > On the Boeing side, boardroom trust in the IAM leader has been knocked by the reversal, which saw his members roundly reject a contract he negotiated and supported, according to the two people involved in the talks. His endorsement had appeared to be a much-needed win for Ortberg and Boeing, whose shares jumped almost 4% on Monday, Sept. 9 as investors cheered. > Holden and Boeing chief negotiator Michael Fitzsimmons and their respective teams of about a dozen apiece had spent several weeks since July broadly discussing terms, the people said. > In the last three weeks, the negotiations accelerated and intensified with the two teams moving into rooms at the Westin Hotel and holding talks several times a day, they added. > Ortberg dropped in to the hotel on the evening of Saturday, Sept. 7 to confirm the details with Holden, according to the sources. The deal was finally agreed shortly after 2 a.m. and announced hours later. > On the union side, Holden also faces opposition from within his ranks, with some hardline members furious at him for endorsing an offer that most workers opposed, opening a rift at a critical point in the talks, five IAM members told Reuters. > "You know, you don't trust him. You put faith in the guy ... and then we pretty much feel like he's failed you," said Mike Toman, a striking worker protesting outside a factory making Boeing's best-selling 737 jet. > It was the first time in three decades that the IAM's local leader had recommended accepting a contract, raising the ire of many workers. Posts on union social media channels described him as a "sellout" and called his negotiation "shameful". > Two union organisers told Reuters the bulk of the workforce remained loyal to Holden. The lion's share of the blame is being placed at the feet of Boeing leaders past and present, 10 employees including union organisers and factory workers said. > 'THAT WAS A FAKE OFFER' > Many older Boeing workers have been deeply resentful since their defined-benefit pension was taken away a decade ago in exchange for Boeing keeping production in Washington state, while their standard of living has slowly deteriorated. > Equity research firm Melius Research found median employee compensation for the aerospace and defense firms it monitors grew 12% between 2018 and 2023, while at Boeing it fell 6%. > "While there were many important things in this offer, it didn't bridge the gap for 16 years," Holden said at a media briefing following the vote announcement. "Our members spoke loud and clear tonight." > Other factory employees told Reuters they were furious about the removal of a performance bonus in the latest negotiations, which took a bite out of the headline 25% pay increase spread over four years. > Workers were also suspicious about Boeing's commitment to build its next commercial jet in the region because it came with a clause: it was contingent on the plane programme being launched in the next four years, something that isn't guaranteed, the factory staff said. > "That was a fake offer," said David Hu, a 35-year-old quality inspector. > Boeing workers told Reuters that there was lingering anger about gains secured by former CEO Calhoun, who was re-elected to the board and received almost $33 million in 2023 compensation. > Ortberg, brought in to replace Calhoun and restore faith in the planemaker after the panel blowout, has acknowledged that Boeing's planemaking heartland has been neglected. > Unlike his most recent predecessors, Ortberg has bought a home in Seattle to be closer to the factory floor. > Many union members said they were willing to give the new CEO a chance, raising hopes that he and Holden might be able to get a new deal agreed. > "Mr Ortberg was in a tough position coming in," Holden said at a media briefing on Thursday. > "It's hard to make up for 16 years," he added. "So this isn't necessarily a reflection on him."
SEATTLE, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Boeing bosses are staring down the barrel. The twists and turns of the past week paint a picture of managers badly wrong-footed by the depth of fury among workers who tossed out a 25% pay increase deal and launched strike action. "They probably didn't think that we had enough people for the strike," Kushal Varma, a Boeing mechanic, told Reuters. "But this is a movement of people who are willing to put their livelihoods on the line to get what's fair." With little time to regroup, and pressure mounting, management enters a fresh week of talks to contain the crisis at the $97 billion U.S. aerospace champion (BA.N) , opens new tab. A week ago, Boeing executives believed they'd done enough to secure the pay deal with around 33,000 workers in Washington state, the heart of the company's global manufacturing operations, according to two people directly involved in the talks that have played out at Seattle's upscale Westin hotel. The company's initial pay increase offer had been about 12%, said the people, who requested anonymity to discuss confidential and unreported details about the horse-trading, though that number gradually crept up during the weeks of negotiations. But in an 11th-hour concession on Saturday, Sept. 7 to clinch the support of union leader Jon Holden and seal what they expected to be a swift resolution to the dispute, Boeing executives hiked the offer significantly to 25% and pledged to build the company's next commercial jet in the state, the people added. "Much of it came together in the last four or five hours," Holden told Reuters after the tentative agreement was announced on Sept. 8, adding that he and Boeing management had worked until "the wee hours". Boeing and the union hailed the deal as "historic" because of the record headline wage hike for the company and the first-of-its-kind plane commitment. It was a spectacular failure. Three days later, 94% of members of Holden's International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) rejected the offer and 96% voted to strike. Reuters interviews with more than 20 people, including Boeing officials, union leaders and factory workers, show how badly the U.S. aerospace champion underestimated the scale of the resentment felt by workers over cost-of-living pressures and pay agreements of previous years. Boeing and the IAM declined to comment for this article. The details of the deal's collapse also reveal how trust between Boeing and union leadership has eroded, complicating talks due to resume in coming days. Two days after Boeing announced its offer, as union member frustration seeped into the media, commercial planes chief Stephanie Pope wrote an open letter to workers, saying the company had held nothing back and this was the best deal they would get. CEO Kelly Ortberg followed up with an open letter the next day, telling workers that voting against the deal would send them down a path "where no one wins". Rather than rallying the troops, the letters backfired, according to four workers who said many union members saw them as ultimatums. "I thought they were unprofessional and threatening," said Josh King, a quality control inspector at a Boeing Seattle factory. Boeing finance chief Brian West acknowledged the disconnect with staff. "We had an unprecedented temporary agreement that was unanimously endorsed by union leadership. And over the last few days, it became very clear, loud and clear, with our union members that that offer didn't meet the mark," he told a Morgan Stanley conference at the beachside Ritz-Carlton in Dana Point, California on Friday. In a conversation with a small group of investors on the sidelines of the event, West added that while Boeing had focused on the future plane pledge, workers were more concerned about their current wallets, according to a person who was present and requested anonymity as the discussion was private. Reuters was unable to reach West for comment. The 25% general wage increase offered was in line with gains won by other sectors such as autoworkers. Nonetheless, many Boeing workers have struggled to make ends meet over the years; since the last full wage deal in 2008, factory wages have lagged inflation, while healthcare and living costs have leapt. UNION LEADER IN SPOTLIGHT Boeing, which dominates the global planemaking market with European rival Airbus (AIR.PA) , opens new tab, has been wrestling with production and safety crises since two deadly 737 MAX plane crashes in 2018 and 2019. The latest upheaval was sparked by a door panel flying off a near-new 737 MAX plane in midair in January, prompting the exit of former CEO Dave Calhoun and a 30% drop in the company's share price this year. As the new crunch labor talks loom, union chief Holden also finds himself under the microscope. On the Boeing side, boardroom trust in the IAM leader has been knocked by the reversal, which saw his members roundly reject a contract he negotiated and supported, according to the two people involved in the talks. His endorsement had appeared to be a much-needed win for Ortberg and Boeing, whose shares jumped almost 4% on Monday, Sept. 9 as investors cheered. Holden and Boeing chief negotiator Michael Fitzsimmons and their respective teams of about a dozen apiece had spent several weeks since July broadly discussing terms, the people said. In the last three weeks, the negotiations accelerated and intensified with the two teams moving into rooms at the Westin Hotel and holding talks several times a day, they added. Ortberg dropped in to the hotel on the evening of Saturday, Sept. 7 to confirm the details with Holden, according to the sources. The deal was finally agreed shortly after 2 a.m. and announced hours later. On the union side, Holden also faces opposition from within his ranks, with some hardline members furious at him for endorsing an offer that most workers opposed, opening a rift at a critical point in the talks, five IAM members told Reuters. "You know, you don't trust him. You put faith in the guy ... and then we pretty much feel like he's failed you," said Mike Toman, a striking worker protesting outside a factory making Boeing's best-selling 737 jet. It was the first time in three decades that the IAM's local leader had recommended accepting a contract, raising the ire of many workers. Posts on union social media channels described him as a "sellout" and called his negotiation "shameful". Two union organisers told Reuters the bulk of the workforce remained loyal to Holden. The lion's share of the blame is being placed at the feet of Boeing leaders past and present, 10 employees including union organisers and factory workers said. 'THAT WAS A FAKE OFFER' Many older Boeing workers have been deeply resentful since their defined-benefit pension was taken away a decade ago in exchange for Boeing keeping production in Washington state, while their standard of living has slowly deteriorated. Equity research firm Melius Research found median employee compensation for the aerospace and defense firms it monitors grew 12% between 2018 and 2023, while at Boeing it fell 6%. "While there were many important things in this offer, it didn't bridge the gap for 16 years," Holden said at a media briefing following the vote announcement. "Our members spoke loud and clear tonight." Other factory employees told Reuters they were furious about the removal of a performance bonus in the latest negotiations, which took a bite out of the headline 25% pay increase spread over four years. Workers were also suspicious about Boeing's commitment to build its next commercial jet in the region because it came with a clause: it was contingent on the plane programme being launched in the next four years, something that isn't guaranteed, the factory staff said. "That was a fake offer," said David Hu, a 35-year-old quality inspector. Boeing workers told Reuters that there was lingering anger about gains secured by former CEO Calhoun, who was re-elected to the board and received almost $33 million in 2023 compensation. Ortberg, brought in to replace Calhoun and restore faith in the planemaker after the panel blowout, has acknowledged that Boeing's planemaking heartland has been neglected. Unlike his most recent predecessors, Ortberg has bought a home in Seattle to be closer to the factory floor. Many union members said they were willing to give the new CEO a chance, raising hopes that he and Holden might be able to get a new deal agreed. "Mr Ortberg was in a tough position coming in," Holden said at a media briefing on Thursday. "It's hard to make up for 16 years," he added. "So this isn't necessarily a reflection on him."
seahorse 2 days ago • 100%
I didn't want them getting recruits with it. But enough people have asked, so 606-301-8149.
seahorse 3 days ago • 100%
Our Food Not Bombs chapter regularly works with Suncere to help feed the Willson Tower residents. Great guy!
cross-posted from: https://midwest.social/post/16875840 > Piss Boy terrorist truck was seen in Springfield yesterday
Piss Boy terrorist truck was seen in Springfield yesterday
seahorse 4 days ago • 100%
Not gonna recruit for them
seahorse 4 days ago • 100%
The original wasn't censored so I did it.
seahorse 4 days ago • 100%
Not gonna give out their recruitment number for them.
seahorse 4 days ago • 100%
They've always been here unfortunately
cross-posted from: https://midwest.social/post/16863335 > There was also a march today in town by Piss Boys
I'm hearing reports that lots of fash are on the ground there. Anyone got any intel they'd be willing to share?
seahorse 6 days ago • 100%
Thank you for the correction. I'm just going on what those around me have been saying. It is very expensive though.
seahorse 7 days ago • 100%
Done
seahorse 7 days ago • 66%
Next door in Ohio we taxed the shit out of our weed and now nobody is buying any. We just go up to Michigan for it.
seahorse 1 week ago • 100%
Yes, we had some issues with an upgrade and some data was lost. Sorry, should have made a post.
seahorse 1 week ago • 94%
Oh great...I'm sure a bunch of thugs with badges will make this situation better.
seahorse 1 week ago • 100%
This is the proper way to inflict max damage on Italians.
Until this moment I completely forgot about those things
From @anarchoninaanalyzes@treehouse.systems on mastodon: At this point I suspect that it will surprise precisely no one to learn that GOP VP candidate JD Vance has once again been found with his hand in the fascist cookie jar; this time it turns out that his press secretary, Parker Magid, recently worked for a far right political consultancy firm that brags about its ability to conduct "clandestine action" and has ties to reactionary extremist groups, and far right think tanks - so, fascists. "Beth Daviess, a researcher at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, who has published research on SACR, said the politics represented by the group are “much more extreme than mainstream conservatism”. She explained there were two elements of that extremism: “their opinions on gender and the role women should have in society” and “their views on whether government should be democratic at all”. The link is just one of a series of connections between Vance and the so-called “new right”, an anti-democratic movement that attacks feminism, racial equality and immigrants while centering the grievances of white men. Those connections were dramatized in an April 2023 photo resurfaced last month in which Vance posed with the staff of New Founding, a Beck & Stone-aligned venture capital firm “for the right” that opposes what it calls “woke capital." The firm in question is called Beck & Stone, which sounds benign enough until you take a look at their clients list, which includes far right magazines who label themselves "counter revolutionary" (so against the left and liberalism), noted Peter Thiel fash-puppet Blake Masters, and the Society for American Civic Renewal - a men-only "secret society" founded by Scott Yenor, the guy we talked about a couple weeks ago who wants to teach your kids to shoot guns and build walls instead of social studies. This incestuous nest of fascist vipers also includes the revanchist far right think tank The Claremont Institute, and a venture capital firm that finances far right wing (read: fascist) enterprises. That firm's in house journal is called American Reformer, and inside you'll find articles attempting to tie left wing activists to Hamas, declaring masking during a pandemic to be anti-Christian, and making the argument for ominous sounding reprisals for Trump's felony fraud convictions by noting: "in a state of nature, differences are resolved by power.” Astoundingly these aren't the only interwoven relationships with far right organizations and "respectable" fascists the firm Magid worked for maintains; if you dig far enough into the article you'll find a connection to another revanchist rag called IM-1776 which is tied to noted fascist propagandist Chris Rufo, and "has published pieces praising El Salvador’s authoritarian president, Nayib Bukele; Renaud Camus, who coined the “great replacement” conspiracy theory; the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski; and the Italian proto-fascist Gabriele D’Annunzio." So in other words, these guys are fucking nazis and its only the Pig Empire's unwritten rule about not saying that out loud that's obscuring that fact - a rule I do not subscribe to, and I would advise you not to either if you don't want to eventually get frog-marched to a labor camp by fascists. So, what do you call politicians, press secretaries, and consultancy firms that hand out with, work for, and promote fascists? Yes, as Chris Rock once noted, you call them fascists too. Furthermore, given that this spider web of revanchist freaks is only one small portion of JD Vance's extensive connections to reactionary extremists, fascist "intellectuals" like Curtis Yarvin, so-called "New Right" think tanks, and a shitlord nazi billionaire supervillain name Peter Thiel, I think it's pretty clear that Vance is more than just window dressing for a Trump campaign also running to install overt fascism in America; after all, Trump is a 78 year old man who wolfs down Big Macs like they're going out of style, which means if elected JD Vance would be alarmingly close to the big chair and being able to make all his nazi friends' dreams come true with the full powers of the presidency. Look, you might be tired of me telling you that JD Vance is a fucking nazi, and I'm honestly a little tired of writing it. But so long as the Pig Empire establishment and much of its media insist on refusing to say the quiet part out loud, it's important that everyone watching this nazi clown car speak the truth, and loudly. Whether you want to call it counter-revolutionary, far right, New Right, or "our guy" like 4Chan nazi shitposters, the fact is that JD Vance is a fascist, working for fascists, who are trying to transform America from a police state into a permanent overt fascist dictatorship. Those are just the facts, and more people should be speaking them out loud.
seahorse 2 weeks ago • 100%
Back when I did crossfit I chose to play this song over the sound system at the gym and forgot about the orgasm sounds at the beginning lol
seahorse 2 weeks ago • 84%
Lol some cracker reported this meme as "any race joke is racist"
seahorse 3 weeks ago • 100%
A little obstacle like a wood chip on the ground will jam up the pallet jack and stop it from moving
seahorse 3 weeks ago • 100%
There's a guy not far from me who flies a trump flag above a jesus flag
seahorse 3 weeks ago • 100%
That's what it is
seahorse 4 weeks ago • 100%
Wish I could make pride this year. Have other stuff going on unfortunately.
seahorse 1 month ago • 80%
It's an acquired taste I think. I lived in South Carolina for 2.5 years and much prefer Ohio.
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
Supposedly something that is "bad" or "cringe" or "weird"
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
Tech bros are usually just finance bros who like tech.
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
Sort of related: my brother wanted to play with my dad one day back in the 90s but he was trying to finish doing some thing on his computer. He was always on it though. When my dad said he would in a little bit my brother said, "stupid pooter...".
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
The vet was absolutely smitten by him. He's incredibly docile and well-behaved. She said she wishes all cats were like him.
seahorse 1 month ago • 97%
Well, you're free to do that, but unfortunately we don't have time to deprogram enough of them. These people need to be met with force.
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
I would actually really like to see what furniture is considered antique in 1907. Shit has to be like late 1700s to early 1800s
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
And Cops
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
Wilson Tower, East 55th near midtown.
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
ACAB
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
Love how these people bootlick a billionaire like Jeff Bezos while being so, so far from ever having that much wealth.
Jail isn't enough for Bezos as far as I'm concerned though. Dude should be shot.
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
Same people with back the blue stickers on their cars are worried about someone coming for their guns.
seahorse 1 month ago • 100%
Just don't get any on you when watching Cars 2 in the movie theater.
seahorse 1 month ago • 85%
The last question has you acknowledge that this is a leftist instance.
seahorse 1 month ago • 3%
seahorse 1 month ago • 3%
I literally don't care
seahorse 1 month ago • 12%
I highly doubt anyone is on the fence at this point
seahorse 1 month ago • 27%
Ew, this is not the dunk libs think it is. “Don’t protest our complicity in genocide or else you’ll lose democracy and freedom.”
Edit: Downvote all you want, libs. I run this server.