And calling your brothers on an assembly line,...middle class,...too funny.
The middle class are those who deserve the wage the earn, because they have a marketable skill,...NOT a wage earned by blackmailing their employer.
FAST
And that's what I never understood about union guys.
If they think they are that good, why would any company outsource to some other labour pool in a different country? Every company wants to make money. And the key to making money is selling good products and a good price. If those low skilled lowly paid foreigners are that bad, the products will suck and the company won't outsource ever again. Instead they will keep production in Canada, or the US etc....
But they don't.
The reason is because the companies notice:
1. Lower costs
2. It's still worth the hassle and going through hoops setting up shop in another country and transporting goods 1,000s of KMs away
3. The quality is just as good, or close enough that it won't affect sales
As Keebler said, specialize in some high end stuff which is hard to off-shore. But if a company can't or won't. Or the local workforce can't handle it, then you better brush up your resume because some factory in Mexico is on the door step.
It's just a change in the way jobs are done. If this was 50 years ago, Canada, US and Europe would be firing on all cylinders churning out high grade manufacturing. But now, lots of it gets done in poorer countries because they realize it's cheaper, automation helps things, and richer countries transform to services. For every no-name manufacturing plant that disappears, Canada's big 6 banks make billions of profits both locally and from overseas. For example, TD bank has over 1,000 branches in the US. Who knew.
Or get involved with retailing. Loblaws head office has 4,000 people alone. Even the lowest paid person there (probably some junior analyst out of university) gets paid $40,000 minimum. Get a senior level job and you're making $100,000+ easy.
So ok, Canadian manufacturing may be on the downtrend, but something like banking is on the uptrend.
Sector changes. A blue collar worker gets burned his career path is tough going, but for someone like me who does finances (when I skim job sites), has a gazillion jobs available at banks. Oh well, that's how it goes. If this was 40 years ago, it would be the opposite and a bean counter guy like me would be stuck, while there would be lots of manufacturing. That's how it goes.
You don't see white collar workers complaining. Lots of jobs in finances, sales, marketing, IT, all that internet coding stuff etc....