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Harley strikes York plant
York Daily Record ^ | 1/31/07

Posted on 01/31/2007 12:41:44 PM PST by nowings

Jan 31, 2007 — About 98 percent of Harley's nearly 2,800 unionized workers have voted to strike. The contract expires at 12:01 a.m. Friday, and picketing will begin at that time, union representatives said.

Discussions on the proposed labor contract began at 9 a.m. today in the Toyota Arena at the York Expo Center, where the members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers Local 175 met.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: harleyunion
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To: nowings

It's off to China! The Union members can sit at the port and wave goodbye. Anyone in an American manufacturing job right now, especially a good paying one, should be dammed appreciative of their jobs. Such Unions have no place anymore, as they do more to hurt the employees than help them.


221 posted on 02/01/2007 6:40:33 PM PST by KoRn
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To: sgtbono2002

"Its a fun show they put on, but if you want to see the fast ones go to the Metric drags."

WTF? wasn't it just last year that had to ADD a bunch of weight to the harley in AMA because all the jap bikes were crying about getting beat so bad.


222 posted on 02/01/2007 6:44:54 PM PST by postaldave (republicans need spending rehab before trying to control congress again.)
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I don't think the companies proposed annual wage increases of 4 percent over three years is bad at all. As for contributing towards health insurance coverage, we've been doing that for years!

BTW, I am a member of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers though a different local. Our last contract, we got a ZERO raise the first or three years. And never have we gotten 4 percent.


223 posted on 02/01/2007 7:18:13 PM PST by CTSeditor
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To: postaldave

You got me there pal, I never heard that one.


224 posted on 02/01/2007 7:45:28 PM PST by sgtbono2002 (I will forgive Jane Fonda, when the Jews forgive Hitler.)
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To: 66-442hot
The difference is the union uses tactics that are un American to get the management to submit to their demands. One can hardly blame management for giving in to union demands when hundreds of millions are lost every day of a strike.

I've heard this argument before and it won't wash for me. Holding a corporation hostage because you can is not "negotiating". I had 2 years of college in electronics and was in telephony in the military. I knew they couldn't hire a high school grad to take my place, but there were many making the same money I made with different titles. Several times the company wanted to give my tittle a raise to attract more trained people, but the union said we all had to make the same. Now they are using more and more contractors to do the labor intensive jobs. The union forced the company to cut the jobs of people that couldn't or wouldn't get more training. If they had just taken a pay differential, the union jobs could have been saved. Hard headedness cost the union 10's of thousands of jobs. Illegal aliens now do the work for contractors that we used to do for half the money.

Yea unions! If unions are going to survive, they are going to have to have professional people run them instead of the knee breakers. They are playing chess with a checkers mentality.

225 posted on 02/01/2007 7:51:44 PM PST by chuckles
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To: chuckles

unions have a new racket now, the teacher's unions. They have almost 50% of all the monies from the treasuries of most states, cannot be fired, can strike, and their jobs cannot be exported, not yet anyway, and many cannot read or write at the level they teach.. Pretty cool scam.


226 posted on 02/01/2007 8:05:55 PM PST by going hot (Happiness is a momma deuce)
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To: going hot
....."unions have a new racket now".....

Not new at all. Old as the hills. That is why we graduate dumb anarchists and socialist's who believe patriotism is burning a flag. To see some of them, go to You Tube and watch as they set themselves on fire, jump off buildings, stick all manor of fireworks up their a$$'s, and then laugh as their buddies bleed.

Every day people tout the latest poll results and I just wonder why anyone would ask these morons what they thought about anything. We saw them in action trying to vote in Florida. They weren't able to punch a hole through paper, but they were able to choose a president. Sean Hanity just showed them a week or so ago and they couldn't recognize pictures of Pelosi, or Cheney, but loved Pelosi and hated Cheney. They also couldn't recite the Pledge of Allegiance.

227 posted on 02/01/2007 10:21:54 PM PST by chuckles
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To: chuckles
I just went down the road and passed the Harley Plant.

Yup, they are striking and freezing the bunnzies off.

BTW, they showed up for work today and their entry passes did not work but they got paid anyway. Harley called it a "Non Productive Day".

228 posted on 02/01/2007 10:30:37 PM PST by AGreatPer
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To: HOTTIEBOY

To be truthful, it wasn't me, but I was watching a carnival salesman ask the guys with Officially Licensed Harley Gear, many in chaps and black leather do-rags, etc. what color their bike was. Yeah, about 3/4 had no bike at all, most never did. I heard alot of "The bitch won't let me get one" stuff. I had more fun watching that than my kids had on the rides andstuff.


229 posted on 02/02/2007 4:18:20 AM PST by Fierce Allegiance ("Campers laugh at clowns behind closed doors." GOHUNTER08!)
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To: postaldave

My Showa forks weren't made here either. So what?


230 posted on 02/02/2007 5:39:42 AM PST by Melas (Offending stupid people since 1963)
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To: Melas
It was in response to the ergonomics. The Rebel is one of the few bikes that I think fits me well. As far as powered, it's not possible since I do like to ride on the highway.

why not? top speed is over 75mph. heck, my 73 cb350 runs highway speeds just fine.
231 posted on 02/02/2007 6:10:26 AM PST by absolootezer0 (stop repeat offenders - don't re-elect them!)
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To: absolootezer0
why not? top speed is over 75mph. heck, my 73 cb350 runs highway speeds just fine.

That's exceedingly generous. I had a silver Rebel 450 back in the day, it could barely sustain 75mph for general riding condidtions. I had it over 100mph once, but that was on perfectly flat ground, a tail wind, and I was lying on the tank. It was actually that bike that convinced me that my father was right, and I needed a Harley.

When I stepped back and looked at it, what I liked best about that bike is that it was often mistaken for a Harley. I know Hottie especially hates to hear this, but I owned a dozen Japanese bikes of varying types before I bought my first HD. I'm intimately familiar with them.

For what it's worth, my baby girl is getting a Rebel for her 16th birthday.

232 posted on 02/02/2007 6:28:43 AM PST by Melas (Offending stupid people since 1963)
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To: sgtbono2002

I hear ya.

The main reason I haul my bike is because I take my camper. To me, its more of a camping trip than a bike ride. I, like you, have been going to these rallies for years and years, so riding across state is nothing new and comfort has taken over.

There are other times when me and HottieGirl will take a bike on a 300 mile ride. But it is planned out as a ride.


233 posted on 02/02/2007 6:30:05 AM PST by HOTTIEBOY (Campers laugh at clowns behind closed doors.)
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To: Melas
For what it's worth, my baby girl is getting a Rebel for her 16th birthday.

wish i had a dad like you. :)
my dad is apparently hitting his mid-life crisis and thinks I should buy HIM a bike.
234 posted on 02/02/2007 6:34:58 AM PST by absolootezer0 (stop repeat offenders - don't re-elect them!)
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To: HOTTIEBOY

We take them too, but we dont have to rush and we get pleny of rest time and stop along the way.

The poblem with a long trip to Daytona or Sturgis is that you want to get from point A to point B in the shortest amount of time, because thats where the party is.

I have ridden for 14 hours to get home from Daytona so I could work next day. Takes about 3 days to recover.


235 posted on 02/02/2007 7:43:13 AM PST by sgtbono2002 (I will forgive Jane Fonda, when the Jews forgive Hitler.)
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To: An Old Man
Quit yer bitchin, the money doesn't come from your paycheck. The spread is nothing more than a reflection of the rate of inflation of the currency.

An Old Man that happens to be an Ignorant Man, I see. Look up "FICA" idiot. YES. It does come out of 'my' paycheck.

236 posted on 02/02/2007 12:45:17 PM PST by sam_paine (X .................................)
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To: sam_paine
I wrote to Sam_Paine:

"Quit yer bitchin, the money doesn't come from your paycheck. The spread is nothing more than a reflection of the rate of inflation of the currency."

To which Sam Paine replied:

An Old Man that happens to be an Ignorant Man, I see. Look up "FICA" idiot. YES. It does come out of 'my' paycheck.

Sam, I did not mean to hurt your feelings, and I am sorry you were not able to understand what I wrote. You see, I was born way back in the middle of what you now call the Great Depression and have seen the progression of this social security thing since its inception.

Way back then people used to get paid by the day instead of the hour. A good wage was somewhere near $0.35 per day. That was a lot of money in those days especially for some people who were becoming used to making absolutely nothing. Believe it or not, working men were able to fed their families on that meager amount of currency.

Fast forward to today, A great many people I know are earning hourly wages that range from as low as $17 to the mid $40s. Most however are making about $35/hr which is about average. Back then, Dad and Grandpa worked 6 days a week for their money and frankly were pleased to get it. There were after all, a lot of people who were unemployed. You might note that the ratio of $35:hour::$0.35:day is quite astounding in that the people today on average make over 90.5 times more than Dad and Grandpa made when social security started.

I like to use the bread analogy when trying to compare the relative earnings of those who were lucky enough to have employment then with those working today. Back then, a loaf of white bread could be purchased for about a nickel ($0.05). Today I buy bread all the time for a price between $1.00 on the low end to as much as $3.50 on the high end. Averaging those two prices, you could say I spend on average about $2.25 Per loaf. The ratio of $0.05::$2.25 is about 45 which means that the price of bread has increased to about 45 times what it was during the great depression. Compare that with wages, which have gone up about 100 times.

Now I have to admit that Dad and Grandpa were not the brightest bulbs on the tree, but they tried. They had this idea that if they would provide something that everyone could use people would beat a path to their door. In pursuit of the goal of making something they could sell, both arose early (that would be about 3AM) and went to the bakery where they both engaged in the process of making dough for the bread. By 8AM they had somehow managed to make a small mountain of loaves to sell to the public. When it was almost all sold, grandpa took the remainder and gave it away to those who could not afford the nickel to purchase a loaf. then the process of washing and drying and moping floors and hauling ashes and a hundred other sundry tasks were finished both men locked the bakery doors and went home for supper at around 7PM.

Every night after supper, Grandpa would pour the contents of the small bag containing the day’s receipts on the kitchen table where he did the accounting. After subtracting the cost of salt, flower, yeast, water and fuel from the days receipts, he determined there would be at least 7 nickels left over to pay Dad's wages on pay day. The remainder was considered profit and Grandpa put those away in a safe place.

One day, A fella from the government came along and announced a "New Deal". He proclaimed loud and clear for all to hear that from now on nobody would be destitute in their old age. All would be entitled to receive a monthly stipend from the government from the time they reached 65 years of age right up until the moment of their death.

Grandpa went along with the program and increased Dads pay by enough to offset the amount he had to send to the government. Dad’s pay went from $0.35/day to $0.36/day but he was not required to make more bread than he did the day before. Grandpa who didn't have the advantage of an advanced education, decided that he would increase the price of each loaf of bread by $0.01 because he could not figure out how to divide a penny into several parts. The results of that move were somewhat mixed. A few people were so outraged at the increase that they never came back to the bakery again. Others bought less, while most continued to purchase in the same quantities as before. The result was that the bakery sold less bread at a higher price but the profits remained about the same. Dad continued to make as much as he did before the "New Deal" and everyone was happy.

Several years later we got involved a big war and sales boomed. The bakery was selected by the government to make those little round crackers that were put in the "C" rations. That was good for business for awhile but eventually the government ran out of money and decided to tax everyone to get the cash rolling into the government till again. The government also decided to give us another dish of "New Deal" and announced that more people were now eligible for the Social security benefits. The democrats seemed to think that was a great idea. They even figured out a way to make it a pay as you go system. To cover the expense of the newest members of the entitlement crowd, grandpa was asked to pay a new tax based upon how much he was already paying his workers (That was good old Dad). In reality Grandpa was really paying both parts of the FICA Tax. His solution was to charge the government more for those little round crackers and to increase the price of bread to everyone else. As before some people never came into the bakery again, the government got angry and canceled the contract for the little round crackers but the rest of the people reluctantly paid the increase in the price of bread and life went on.

After the war was over, Grandpa took his $35/month Social security check and retired. Dad was now the manager of the bakery and I was elected to get up early and start the fires in the ovens. Dad had a much better education than Grandpa having completed High School before all this "New Deal" stuff came along decided that the only way to increase profits was to expand the business. We put in an automatic bread slicer and a brand new Hobart dough mixer. The small mountain of loaves grew to epic proportions. We had to hire more help to move the bread to the trucks we had to buy to get the bread to the stores who could no longer come and get it because they were overworked filling orders for all the baby boomers who appeared shortly after the war. Whew! It makes a fella tired just thinking about all the work being done down at the old bakery. Just after the war was a great time to be in the bakery business except for two things. The government kept raising the taxes we paid on the income we were making and the people we employed were complaining that the wages we paid (Wager were now up to about $1.35/day) were not enough to pay for the goods they needed to have to provide for their familys. Dad sought the advice of Grandpa who responded with the same solution as before. The employees got a raise, the government got more taxes and the price of bread went up.

I forgot to mention some of the other benefits of the "New Deal". This is a good time to bring two of those to your attention. Due to the lack of faith in the banking system, the government came up with a great idea. The government would insure in the future all moneys stored in a bank. They even thought up a catchy title for the new department charged with administering the program. Today it is called "The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation" You will find a little sticker on the front door of every bank that belongs to the system. Makes me feel real good to know that my money is safe again. How about you? A few years ago, we did have a few bank failures and sure enough the government covered all of the losses. The next thing that happened was that dad got a bill for more taxes. It seems that the government did not have enough money to pay the losses incurred when the banks failed.

By now we had the system figured out. Instead of waiting for our employees to ask for a raise, we invented a little thing called a cost of living raise which we give them every year regardless of whether they improve their productivity or not. The government came up with a nifty idea to pacify all the workers about the security of their retirement funds and now make us separate their wages into various categories. The item you see on your pay check titled FICA is just another sticker on the window. We also send more money to the government and raise the price of bread.

Over the years we have made great strides in improving the productivity of the bakery. What started as a few hundred loaves/day has grown into the tens of thousands of loaves/day. We now employ lots of people to produce bread and to assist in getting it to the stores that sell it to you. Over the years, we have raised the price of bread to a level we would never considered possible back in the early days. We still use the same amount of ingredients in each loaf however.

At no time during the history of the bakery has any one of our employees paid a single penny into social security. The money we sent to the government came from the sale of bread. Our little company simply acted as middle man collecting taxes from the purchasers and sending it to the government.

Every company that I know of does business exactly as I have described above, If you have a better way, I would be happy to sell the bakery to you.

An Old Man

237 posted on 02/02/2007 4:09:48 PM PST by An Old Man (Socialism is a tool designed to "socialize" (i.e., confiscate, not create) wealth)
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To: Fierce Allegiance

So that is where all of that garb is made? I always thought it came from some Klingon yard sale.


238 posted on 02/02/2007 4:13:18 PM PST by flying Elvis ("In...War, the errors which proceed from a spirit of benevolence are the worst" Clausewitz.)
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To: An Old Man
At no time during the history of the bakery has any one of our employees paid a single penny into social security.

You can't possibly be involved in any business other than government, judging from your verbose reply. Thank God I don't have to pay by the word to read FR replies. Could you possibly try to restrain yourself to 2,000 words next time?

I've run my own business, sir. It had one employee: me. I've done the accounting. I've seen the checks come in, deposited them, and written the check for the 2x FICA tax, mister.

That is money out of MY (young) pocket that went into some Old Man's pocket because of a promise made in my name long ago without my consent. I will NEVER see that money again, and the whole ponzi scheme will (hopefully) collapse by the time I'm supposed to benefit.

Go ahead and enjoy the free ride, though.

239 posted on 02/02/2007 5:40:30 PM PST by sam_paine (X .................................)
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To: sam_paine
quit yer bitchin Sam, you are beginning to sound like a child who can't have his way.

An Old Man

240 posted on 02/02/2007 5:44:22 PM PST by An Old Man (Socialism is a tool designed to "socialize" (i.e., confiscate, not create) wealth)
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