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Forget about auto parts . . . the longshoremen’s strike could disrupt medications.



Photo above - Union boss Frank Sobota prepares to unload a container ship in Baltimore, during season 2 of "The Wire" . . .

I ran into an interesting warning earlier this week. The op-ed writer was convinced that a dockworkers strike (45,000 longshoremen) was inevitable. His advice: If your car needs work, get it done now. Parts delivery will soon be cut off. Routine stuff like engine belts, oil filters, OEM wheels and tires, etc. I was all set to rush out and get my cracked rear window replaced, then I read a different article, below. We could run out of medicines.

Thankfully the article DOESN’T say which ones. Which would only cause people to rush out and buy up everything they can get their hands on. Remember what happened during Covid 19, when media warnings resulted in thousands of grannies filling their shopping carts with paper towels and toilet paper, leaving the shelves bare? And America is already suffering from an Ozempic shortage. A dock strike might cause people to gain weight. I don’t know how the legitimate diabetes patients are making out today, because pudgy people are buying up so much of the medicine.

The same thing happened with Covid 19 masks. Doctor Nick Riviera (not his real name) made appearances on TV, telling people to mask up. In fact, he told people to wear 2 or 3 masks at once, just to be safe (this is absolutely true). The result? Store sold out masks instantly. Hospitals (nurses and doctors) ran out. Then Amazon began hawking “approved N95 masks” online. Made in China. Testing by labs showed that 90% of these masks didn’t come close to meeting the safety standards.

The same thing is likely to happen if medicines can’t be offloaded at US ports. Cheap imitations and counterfeits will show up. From multiple sources . . . I don’t want to just pick on China, even though they are pretty nimble in these situations. Anyone want to pay 10X the listed price for a fake drug? If you’re sick, you probably would.

This is NOT a rant about dockworkers. Even though their strike seems timed for maximum impact during the final weeks of the 2024 election. If a guy with a screwdriver and pair of pliers can make $140,000 on a UAW assembly line, why not a crane operator or driver at the port of Baltimore, dockworkers are probably asking themselves.

A better question might be . . . if America can discuss energy independence and food self sufficiency, why not essential medicines too? Why are so many of them arriving on slow boats from wherever? I couldn’t give two hoots about where my car’s oil filter comes from. But my mom’s cancer drugs are a different matter.

I’m just sayin’ . . .

Port strike could delay delivery of critical medications: It could be 'devastating,' doctors say | The New York Ledger (thenyledger.com)
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Blame Bill Clinton when his NAFTA and GATT sent jobs to Mexico and Asia, our supply chain now suffers because of it.
carpediem · M
@NativePortlander1970 To be fair, you need to include Bush Sr. Recall the presidential aspirations of Ross Perot. He came up with “that great sucking sound” which was cash and jobs leaving the US after NAFTA. We was 100% right.
@carpediem I voted for Perot in 1992 as an homage to my paternal Grandfather, an FDR and JFK Dem, who was so disgusted with Clinton he favored Perot, he died of pancreatic cancer before the election, so I went for Perot in his honor and memory. IF we had gotten Perot, we'd still be a strong manufacturing based economy in the United States.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@NativePortlander1970 i'm okay with international sourcing of things which aren't "strategic" (self defense, energy, vital medicines). if all international trade was eliminated only england would still have steam engines, and america would be travelling by stagecoach.
@SusanInFlorida We lost over 25 million high paying industrial manufacturing jobs, permanently, in roughly 18 months, it turned the United States from a strong manufacturing based economy into a weak service based economy, I went from a $13 an hour plastic injection machine operator to $7 an hour grocery store checker/stocker, losing almost half your pay in wages is very degrading.
carpediem · M
@NativePortlander1970 I voted Perot as well. You're correct, we'd still have a strong manufacturing base if he won. And he might have but he was a bit flaky dropping out and then jumping back in. If the US is going to remain the #1 superpower in the world, we need exceptional manufacturing abilities right here.
@carpediem Indeed, he was stranger than strange, specially with all of his charts, BUT he was not wrong one bit.
carpediem · M
@NativePortlander1970 100% correct.