Any PA Freepers effected by this?
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
Join the club...I loose mine to Reynosa Mexico in April...
2 posted on
02/25/2007 3:15:21 PM PST by
Dallas59
(AL GORE STALKED ME ON 2/25/2007!)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
Mexican chocolate? You have got to be kidding...
3 posted on
02/25/2007 3:15:45 PM PST by
kinoxi
To: Diana in Wisconsin
Taylor points a finger at the bizarre and antiquated U.S. sugar subsidy, which inflates the price of sugar to two or three times the price on the world market. By shifting production to Mexico, Hershey can buy sugar at the world price, which in turn can make its product pricing more competitive with its international competitors, Cadbury-Schweppes of Great Britain and Nestle of Switzerland.
The US sugar policy is borderline criminal.
5 posted on
02/25/2007 3:19:57 PM PST by
somniferum
(Annoy a liberal.. Work hard and be happy.)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
They're just going to New Orleans. You know, to keep it a "chocolate city"!!!!!
7 posted on
02/25/2007 3:21:22 PM PST by
jdsteel
(Global Climate Change... for about 4.5 Billion years now and still going strong!)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
Taylor points a finger at the bizarre and antiquated U.S. sugar subsidy, which inflates the price of sugar to two or three times the price on the world market. By shifting production to Mexico, Hershey can buy sugar at the world price, which in turn can make its product pricing more competitive with its international competitors, Cadbury-Schweppes of Great Britain and Nestle of Switzerland. Unintended consequences of Big Government intrusion on the Free Market BUMP.
9 posted on
02/25/2007 3:24:57 PM PST by
M203M4
(Pretty soon "RINO" will mean something good.)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
We have high-paid jobs thanks to the negotiations of the union, he said. Reese (nonunion) workers are getting union-scaled wages to keep the union out.I have not finished the article, but I am not holding my breath to find the other side of the coin,
We are about to lose our high-paid jobs thanks to the negotiations of the union, he said. Reese (nonunion) workers are getting union-scaled wages [and are also about to lose their jobs for the same reason.]
Isn't it amazing what selective amnesia can do to the outraged unemployed?
Of course, under the "me first" union philosophy, they have also lost sight of the reality that they are losing their jobs in part because...
"...Taylor points a finger at the bizarre and antiquated U.S. sugar subsidy, which inflates the price of sugar to two or three times the price on the world market.
... of subsidies to another segment of the presumable free [and probably unionized] market...
10 posted on
02/25/2007 3:25:06 PM PST by
Publius6961
(MSM: Israelis are killed by rockets; Lebanese are killed by Israelis.)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
The deal with sugar pricing has to go.
The loss of manufacturing jobs is the price paid to keep the sugar beet farms going.
The farmers have a better lobby.
13 posted on
02/25/2007 3:27:12 PM PST by
Mark was here
(Hard work never killed anyone, but why take the chance?)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
I don't like this. Maytag. Fannie May. Now Hershey's. And many more I can't remember who all has gone to Mexico. Maybe I will boycott. I have no idea how old my Maytag washer and dryer are, high capacity, top-loading washer, brought them home when my aunt died in 1989. Like new then, small leak in washer otherwise ok, think the dial/timer is getting out of sync. Fannie May I can no longer afford although I see one of the new supermarkets less than one mile away carries some. I used to love to stop by the placein the mall they had and get a little bag of my favs, trinidads, fruit and rum, apricot something w/white chocolate and toasted coconut, orange peel, several others. Hershey's about all I buy of that are the powdered cocoa, like it the best, and sometimes regular chocolate bars for s'mores, kisses for peanut blossom cookies. We have a Nestle's plant here in town, wonder what they make? I can make my own chocolate-covered orange peel, but it is a lot of work, tastes the same, found several versions that sound fairly easy of a recipe for truffles, so I can make trinidads . . .
14 posted on
02/25/2007 3:28:30 PM PST by
Aliska
To: Diana in Wisconsin
"Whew, thank God we're not in the chocolate biz Jason and Andrea thought to themselves..."
To: Diana in Wisconsin
The line in the article about the rate of pay was highlighted. Is this meant to imply that the union scale pay is high? I frankly don't think that $15.20 an hour--a little over $30K per year--is at all an unreasonable rate of pay for an adult. It does not buy a very fancy lifestyle in that area of PA.
17 posted on
02/25/2007 3:29:23 PM PST by
Fairview
( Everybody is somebody else's weirdo.)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
Diana,
I shipped out a copy of Beer & Food: An American History to you last Friday, USPS Media Mail.
Thanks,
Bob
P.S. I love Hershey bars with almond.
21 posted on
02/25/2007 3:32:42 PM PST by
toddlintown
(Six bullets and Lennon goes down. Yet not one hit Yoko. Discuss.)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
Local 464 of the Chocolate Workers of AmericaLook for...the union label...
22 posted on
02/25/2007 3:33:27 PM PST by
AmishDude
(It doesn't matter whom you vote for. It matters who takes office.)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
Mexicans are getting a very good deal these days.
They can come over here and take our jobs, OR they can stay in Mexico and still take our jobs.
sw
26 posted on
02/25/2007 3:34:44 PM PST by
spectre
(Spectre's wife) (Duncan Hunter 08 "Will you join us"?)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
They have been downsizing some departments a little at a time Just doing what they know how to do. Downsize the product; downsize the factory. Sales may be down as well since none of those hershey bars are cheap. In fact, their price is about the same as the elite luxury brands.
30 posted on
02/25/2007 3:36:30 PM PST by
RightWhale
(300 miles north of Big Wild Life)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
Local 464 of the Chocolate Workers of America
To: Diana in Wisconsin
We have high-paid jobs thanks to the negotiations of the union, he said. Reese (nonunion) workers are getting union-scaled wages to keep the union out. The union negotiated them out of a job, apparently.
39 posted on
02/25/2007 3:44:17 PM PST by
Caipirabob
(Communists... Socialists... Democrats...Traitors... Who can tell the difference?)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
I wonder how this affects Hershey Park. That was ( at least the last time I was there years ago.)... a really nice place to take your children. There was a tour of the choc factory and it still had a old time quaint feel to it. I feel really bad for these people in PA. I have family in Hazelton and some do work for the candy company.
40 posted on
02/25/2007 3:44:34 PM PST by
pandoraou812
( zero tolerance to the will of Allah ...... dilligaf? with an efg.....)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
More American companies exploiting Mexican slave labor. Why am I not surprised?
42 posted on
02/25/2007 3:44:48 PM PST by
mysterio
To: Diana in Wisconsin
I won't be buying Hershey's chocolate if it's made in Mexico.
You think those rats running rampant in the Greenwich Village Taco Bell were bad? Can you just picture a Mexican chocolate factory?
After Hershey moves to Mexico:
"Ummm...hey...I got six extra almonds in my Hershey bar."
"Er...are you sure those are almonds?"
44 posted on
02/25/2007 3:45:33 PM PST by
Palladin
(You cannot glorify God better than by a calm and joyous life.--Spurgeon)
To: Diana in Wisconsin
"The reason for the workers lack of information is simple, Hummel said. Hersheys administration is out for the stockholders. No kidding moron.
47 posted on
02/25/2007 3:49:16 PM PST by
2111USMC
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