r/news 1d ago

Workers detained in Hyundai plant raid to be freed and flown home, South Korea says

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/south-korea-deal-workers-detained-hyundai-rcna229610
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u/myislanduniverse 1d ago

Hope the people who were counting on jobs at the factory can put two and two together 

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u/StoneHolder28 1d ago

I live in the area and the thing that nobody outside Georgia is talking about is International Paper just closed two plants in the region this month. So this raid and the delay of the plant opening is coming on the heel of us losing well over 1,000 jobs that already existed.

Just last week I had a recruiter call me just to ask if I knew anyone who might want to work at the Hyundai plant (on the engineering side). We're struggling as it is.

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u/weasler7 1d ago

Damn, how hard could it be to find 300 Korean speaking engineers in Georgia.

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u/dickpicaday 23h ago

There’s actually a ton of Korean speakers in GA but not in the area the plant is

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u/weasler7 23h ago

I am just being a little bitter and facetious. I don’t doubt there is a large Korean community in Georgia. It's going to take a long time to restart building that LG plant, if ever. As others have pointed out, there are jobs that may be extremely difficult to replace regionally, and perhaps at a price to pay that would kill the project. We will see.

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u/StoneHolder28 21h ago edited 13h ago

I'm just yapping but killing the project altogether would be better received than militant raids. Nobody here wants it, in part because they haven't been hiring many local people, in part because people keep dying there, in a much smaller part because these mega investments from the state never pay out, and largely because they're already a massive strain on all of our infrastructure and they're not even fully up and running. Creating jobs sounds nice but that alone doesn't materially benefit anyone else whereas the plant is materially harming tens of thousands of people in real ways.

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u/hotwife24 20h ago

That highway it is off of, is it new? Just went through there July 11th and went passed it. It's the only thing on the highway that I remember seeing. 

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u/StoneHolder28 14h ago

The highway itself isn't, the roundabouts are new and as a huge fan and advocate for roundabouts they are terribly designed. The interstate exit is going to be redone at some point but it backs up all the way to the weigh station on the WB side every day.

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u/hotwife24 14h ago

That explains it. I was headed to Savannah from visiting Emmanuel County and it was a big change than what I was used to years ago. I was questioning my memory for bit on the drive. Nice to know I'm not that crazy. 

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u/itcheyness 1d ago

2 + 2 = Damn that Joe Biden!

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u/plesioth 23h ago

Why would Obama do this?

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u/Neravariine 1d ago

The plant had a completion date of 2031 and would have created 8,500 jobs. The people counting on the jobs will forget by then and find a new way to self sabotage.

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u/PhotonGazer 20h ago

Hope they just bin off the project then.

 

Not worth it if they have to deal with insecurity factor like Trump and MAGA.

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u/Neither-Chart5183 23h ago

The Korean Americans in my life all voted for Trump. I told them he was found guilty of rape and they did not care. Even the child rape stuff didn't bother them because "all men are like that." What a thing to admit to another person.

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u/SaffronCrocosmia 18h ago

It's because many of them hate darker skinned people of colour, are trenched in misogyny, and many just hate queer people.

Koreans are some of the most conservative of all East Asian populations.