General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMy good friend passed a message from me to a MAGA male voter who is now on layoff.
We all worked as union drivers at a huge freight outfit that went under in 2023.
I actually left that outfit in 2018 i was done with them i saw the as they say the writing on the wall.
My message that was relayed by my friend to dumb ass.
Don’t be embarrassed it is natural for Male MAGA voters to scream harder daddy when receiving a rectal examination.
I would have called the maga dumb ass personally yet he blocked me on his phone.

2naSalit
(96,954 posts)Was to ask if they'd finally found that rusty spike up their ass without the benefit of lube.
Duncanpup
(14,540 posts)2naSalit
(96,954 posts)Scary times, don't know how it all is supposed to turn out, I'm keeping my head down and watching closely.
Ran into a young lady i used to work with other day. I first met her 2018 she was new in freight fresh out of this union outfit driver training class . She hugged me other day and said do you remember that first time we met.
Story behind this conversation was we both left this satellite freight barn coming off rest out of hotel.And to send us home to our terminal 500 miles away we both had to go to a customer with 53 foot wagons to get freight in day cabs.
She followed me as i been to customer before probably 60 miles dead head I told her i got to stop at Tim Hortons fill up my thermos were on our way.
We got to this customer and the docks were built pre 53 foot wagons and it is tight I went in customer they gave me door. She went in after me got a door me not thinking I went bumped dock down got a sight side back me backing us making sure I don’t tear hood off tractor cement wall in front me tandems on 53 slid all the way up. Me pulling up backing up inching it in just one of those moments.
And here she got door way down at the end of this yard BLINDSIDE back.
She never blindsided she comes up to me can you help me I said I’ll do you one better kiddo we walked back into warehouse walked down their dock found numerous wagons that were already loaded ready to roll.
We walked into shipping and told them have your yard jockey yank out a wagon in sight side dock screw that blindside shit. Their answer he’s on lunch our yard jockey and we have forklift operator at that door ready to load the skids onto her wagon my answer will wait we’re on clock getting paid we as in us are not messing around with a blindside.
I told that shipping clerk not our problem because you fail to think pre plan and knowing you have two drivers on the way and maybe we should have two sight side doors ready.
She got a sight side door after jockey came off lunch. And as I said it was tight place yet in my rain parka I stood outside her tractor watching helping her get in the door in not hitting that wall with front tractor.
She said that took forever sorry i said shit kiddo there are moments where I could have a football field to maneuver and I am beat tired and i take numerous pull ups.
Yet she said she’d never thought of telling shipper then to give her a different door as she was green in freight.
And then yet she has now maybe 30 drivers between her and layoffs.
Fucking imbecile Orange Mac traitor fucking up good decent folks lives.
Bless him, taught me how to handle the jerks on the docks. He told me that if I didn't get unloaded fast or told to wait or put in a tight spot like you describe... become and instant uncontrollable b*+@#, they'll get down to business real fast to get you out of there asap. Of course, we weren't union and often threatened to sell the freight down the row if they didn't get their shit off the trailer real quick, it usually worked.
I learned how to handle the scene and create one if needed.

That's what I'm talkin' about!
TommyT139
(1,433 posts)How much you want to bet Trump claims that as a win?
Duncanpup
(14,540 posts)Tarzanrock
(918 posts)... per the Los Angeles Times this morning.
https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2025-05-03/trumps-tariffs-hit-truckers-and-port-workers
‘The truckers are scrambling’: Trump’s tariffs hit drivers, L.A. port workers hard
Amid a wave of unprecedented tariffs, anxiety is running high for truck drivers like Helen, who makes her living delivering cargo containers from the Los Angeles and Long Beach harbors to warehouses and other customers around Southern California.
After a strong start to the year, the number of jobs has started to slip in recent days and truck drivers have heard reports predicting a sharp decline in incoming cargo for May and June.
Helen, a 38-year-old mother of three, said her family has to stretch to make ends meet even under normal conditions.
“There’s real concern that we’re going to be struggling,” said Helen, a Downey resident who declined to give her last name for fear she might lose work if she is considered disgruntled. “If ships are not coming in and there are no loads, then there is no work. If there is no work there’s no money.”
As President Trump’s aggressive tariffs rattle business owners and shake the foundation of American importing, the men and women who work on the ground at the country’s busiest port are feeling the effects too.
Thousands of dockworkers, heavy equipment operators and truck drivers support a flurry of activity at the Port of Los Angeles, which covers 7,500 acres on San Pedro Bay and processed more than 10 million 20-foot-long cargo units in 2024. The neighboring Port of Long Beach moved 9.6 million 20-foot equivalent units, or TEUs, last year.
With a 145% tariff on China, a 25% tariff on Canada and Mexico, and 10% tariffs on dozens of other countries, the flow of goods into the U.S. is expected to slow drastically.
Fewer shipments into the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach mean less work for the Californians who move cargo, said Raman Dhillon, chief executive of the North American Punjabi Trucking Assn.
“The truckers are scrambling right now,” he said. “They are at the verge of collapsing. The administration needs to move quickly, or it’s going to be chaos and price hikes and empty shelves.”
U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla of California and two other Democratic senators called a news conference Thursday to decry Trump’s tariffs, predicting lost jobs, higher prices and stores bereft of merchandise.
Dozens of agricultural exporters also held a conference call this week to express their fear about how the tariffs, and retaliatory levies by other countries, will affect overseas markets.
“The drop in cargo volume caused by Trump’s tariffs will mean empty shelves when products don’t reach our stores, rising prices on everything from groceries to clothes to cars, and undoubtedly, more Americans out of work,” Padilla said.
A 2023 report found that the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach contributed $21.8 billion in direct revenue to local service providers, generating $2.7 billion in state and local taxes and creating 165,462 jobs, directly and indirectly.
A decline of just 1% in cargo to the ports would wipe away 2,769 jobs and endanger as many as 4,000 others, the study found.
Last week, Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka said arrivals could drop by 35% over the next 14 days.
This threat looms large for members of ILWU Local 13, a union representing longshoremen who unload cargo and support port operations.
“They’re just wondering what’s going to happen,” ILWU Local 13 President Gary Herrera said of his members. “Some of the workforce will not be getting their full 40 hours a week based on the loss of cargo. Job loss is definitely a concern.”
According to Herrera and port officials, there will be more than 30 “blank sailings” in May at the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles, which occur when cargo ships cancel planned trips. That will mean 400,000 fewer containers will be shipped through the ports, officials said.
The impending downturn at the ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles comes not long after the twin facilities reported booming activity, tied to a labor dispute that shut down major ports on the East and Gulf coasts. Nearly one-third of all cargo containers delivered to the U.S. travel through Los Angeles and Long Beach.
Navdeep Gill, who owns the Northern California trucking company Ocean Rail Logistics, said his business is already moving 60% to 70% less cargo as a result of the tariffs.
Gill’s truckers, who haul goods from the Port of Oakland, typically move 50 containers a week. Recently, they have been moving 10 to 15, Gill said.
“When we are not doing anything and the trucks are not working, then we lose money,” he said. His company hauls industrial goods, paper and food products.
“We have fixed expenses like insurance that we cannot bypass, so we’re losing money,” Gill said.
Over the three-day period ending Sunday, 10 container ships are expected at the Port of Los Angeles. That’s a decline from the 17 container ships that typically arrive every three days at this time of year, according to a memo from a trade group that represents shippers.
“That is going to have an effect on the work opportunities for not just us, but for truck drivers, warehouse workers and logistics teams,” said Herrera, the union president. “This is the ripple effect of not having work at the waterfront.”
Helen said that some of her fellow drivers had hoped for a better economy under Trump. Her own exposure is doubled because her husband also drives trucks to and from the ports. Because she is paid per load, Helen’s income does not meet the minimum wage when there are too few jobs available.
“We feel like it’s going to get worse before it gets better,” she said. “You feel this looming uncertainty. It’s hanging over everybody.”
UpInArms
(52,830 posts)“We feel like it’s going to get worse before it gets better,” she said. “You feel this looming uncertainty. It’s hanging over everybody.”
usonian
(17,934 posts)People fall for fascist lies.
Welcome to the FAFO States of America.
Let's stop wannabe Shitler ASAP.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100219770873