How America Dies

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Jane
Jane
1 year ago

I just watched the video about Iowa. I also looked up home prices in Peoria which range from $40,000 to $260,000. Here is a bit more info on this calamity from Iowa Starting Line editor, Amy Rivers.

1,276. That’s how many people in and around the central Iowa town of Perry will lose their jobs by the end of June, after Tyson announced Monday it would permanently close its longtime pork processing plant there.
That’s a HUGE number of workers (and the largest employer in Perry):
It’s more than 12% of Tyson’s entire Iowa workforce.
It amounts to 16% of the population of Perry.
It is the largest plant closure in the state in a decade.
“It was a complete shock to me,” Perry Mayor Dirk Cavanaugh told Iowa Capital Dispatch. “How the town is going to recover, I don’t know.”
Joe Henry, president of the local League of United Latin American Citizens chapter, said he would be closely watching how the state would or would not help workers find employment. He estimated more than half of plant workers are Latino.
“We can’t afford to lose these workers,” Henry said. “And Perry can’t afford to lose those people.”
Workers were unionized with United Food and Commercial Workers. A message left with their union president was not immediately returned.
The Tyson Perry plant has capacity to slaughter and process 8,000 hogs per day, or 2% of all the pork in the US. Tyson reported a loss of $395 million in operating income for the previous fiscal year, and sales of pork, in particular, were down 2.2%.
In 2018, Tyson got $674,326 in state tax credits to help upgrade their building (though no new jobs were created).
It used to be that workers could rely on 39 weeks of unemployment after a plant closure—time enough to skill up in an apprenticeship, for example. Now, those 1,276 workers can only take 26 weeks.
“Those extra weeks are crucial for a community like Perry when the largest employer leaves or closes, so residents are able to get back on their feet and also to allow the town to recover as much as it can,” said Charlie Wishman, president of the Iowa Federation of Labor.

Dave
Dave
1 year ago

Boycott anything Tyson. Period. Forever.

Nobody
Nobody
1 year ago

Over 20 years ago a beef packing/processing plant in Iowa laid off all of their American workers and brought in Mexican workers for a fraction of the labor cost. Sitting on that Board of Directors was the Asian wife of Republican Sen. Phil Gramm. Rest assured that some, if not all, of the labor costs for Tyson will be paid by the Feds/taxpayers. Tell me again how Replacement Theory is a conspiracy.

Nobody
Nobody
1 year ago

Let me remind anyone who forgot. The politicians used to tell us the migrants were only taking jobs Americans won’t do. Americans were doing those jobs. They got replaced. New job applicants won’t do that work for below minimum wage when the original workers were getting American standard wages. They want us dead.

Nobody
Nobody
1 year ago
Reply to  Nobody

And now I just read on CitizenWatchReport that the workers who were laid off at the Iowa plant were also illegals. WTF? Insanity. Apparently newer illegals are cheaper than current illegals.

OPM
OPM
1 year ago

What a deal…Tyson can pay less than $5.00 per hour while the Govt pays $2,000 per month per “replacement”, Healthcare through Medicare and the Ag Dept kicks in EBT Card for $1800 per month per Newbie for groceries…and Tyson is a Van Guard/Black Rock Company….thanks Zionist Mother Weffer Larry Fink! Its getting harder not to be antisemitic these days…

strider777
1 year ago

Would someone please explain to me, again, how the Democrat party is supposed to be “the party of the working man.” What a spectacular lie.

Nobody
Nobody
1 year ago
Reply to  strider777

We’re on our own.