I’m A Twenty Year Truck Driver, I Will Tell You Why America’s “Shipping Crisis” Will Not End

Guest Post by Ryan Johnson

I have a simple question for every ‘expert’ who thinks they understand the root causes of the shipping crisis:

Why is there only one crane for every 50–100 trucks at every port in America?

No ‘expert’ will answer this question.

I’m a Class A truck driver with experience in nearly every aspect of freight. My experience in the trucking industry of 20 years tells me that nothing is going to change in the shipping industry.

Let’s start with understanding some things about ports. Outside of dedicated port trucking companies, most trucking companies won’t touch shipping containers. There is a reason for that.

Think of going to the port as going to WalMart on Black Friday, but imagine only ONE cashier for thousands of customers. Think about the lines. Except at a port, there are at least THREE lines to get a container in or out. The first line is the ‘in’ gate, where hundreds of trucks daily have to pass through 5–10 available gates. The second line is waiting to pick up your container. The third line is for waiting to get out.

For each of these lines the wait time is a minimum of an hour, and I’ve waited up to 8 hours in the first line just to get into the port. Some ports are worse than others, but excessive wait times are not uncommon. It’s a rare day when a driver gets in and out in under two hours. By ‘rare day’, I mean maybe a handful of times a year. Ports don’t even begin to have enough workers to keep the ports fluid, and it doesn’t matter where you are, coastal or inland port, union or non-union port, it’s the same everywhere.

Furthermore, I’m fortunate enough to be a Teamster — a union driver — an employee paid by the hour. Most port drivers are ‘independent contractors’, leased onto a carrier who is paying them by the load. Whether their load takes two hours, fourteen hours, or three days to complete, they get paid the same, and they have to pay 90% of their truck operating expenses (the carrier might pay the other 10%, but usually less.) The rates paid to non-union drivers for shipping container transport are usually extremely low. In a majority of cases, these drivers don’t come close to my union wages. They pay for all their own repairs and fuel, and all truck related expenses. I honestly don’t understand how many of them can even afford to show up for work. There’s no guarantee of ANY wage (not even minimum wage), and in many cases, these drivers make far below minimum wage. In some cases they work 70 hour weeks and still end up owing money to their carrier.

So when the coastal ports started getting clogged up last spring due to the impacts of COVID on business everywhere, drivers started refusing to show up. Congestion got so bad that instead of being able to do three loads a day, they could only do one. They took a 2/3 pay cut and most of these drivers were working 12 hours a day or more. While carriers were charging increased pandemic shipping rates, none of those rate increases went to the driver wages. Many drivers simply quit. However, while the pickup rate for containers severely decreased, they were still being offloaded from the boats. And it’s only gotten worse.

Earlier this summer, both BNSF and Union Pacific Railways shut down their container yards in the Chicago area for a week for inbound containers. These are some of the busiest ports in the country. They had miles upon miles of stack (container) trains waiting to get in to be unloaded. According to BNSF, containers were sitting in the port 1/3 longer than usual, and they simply ran out of space to put them until some of the ones already on the ground had been picked up. Though they did reopen the area ports, they are still over capacity. Stack trains are still sitting loaded, all over the country, waiting to get into a port to unload. And they have to be unloaded, there is a finite number of railcars. Equipment shortages are a large part of this problem.

One of these critical shortages is the container chassis.

A container chassis is the trailer the container sits on. Cranes will load these in port. Chassis are typically container company provided, as trucking companies generally don’t have their own chassis units. They are essential for container trucking. While there are some privately owned chassis, there aren’t enough of those to begin to address the backlog of containers today, and now drivers are sitting around for hours, sometimes days, waiting for chassis.

The impact of the container crisis now hitting residencies in proximity to trucking companies. Containers are being pulled out of the port and dropped anywhere the drivers can find because the trucking company lots are full. Ports are desperate to get containers out so they can unload the new containers coming in by boat. When this happens there is no plan to deliver this freight yet, they are literally just making room for the next ship at the port. This won’t last long, as this just compounds the shortage of chassis. Ports will eventually find themselves unable to move containers out of the port until sitting containers are delivered, emptied, returned, or taken to a storage lot (either loaded or empty) and taken off the chassis there so the chassis can be put back into use. The priority is not delivery, the priority is just to clear the port enough to unload the next boat.

What happens when a container does get to a warehouse?

A large portion of international containers must be hand unloaded because the products are not on pallets. It takes a working crew a considerable amount of time to do this, and warehouse work is usually low wage. A lot of it is actually only temp staffed. Many full time warehouse workers got laid off when the pandemic started, and didn’t come back. So warehouses, like everybody else, are chronically short staffed.

When the port trucker gets to the warehouse, they have to wait for a door (you’ve probably seen warehouse buildings with a bank of roll-up doors for trucks on one side of the building.) The warehouses are behind schedule, sometimes by weeks. After maybe a 2 hour wait, the driver gets a door and drops the container — but now often has to pick up an empty, and goes back to the port to wait in line all over again to drop off the empty.

At the warehouse, the delivered freight is unloaded, and it is usually separated and bound to pallets, then shipped out in much smaller quantities to final destination. A container that had a couple dozen pallets of goods on it will go out on multiple trailers to multiple different destinations a few pallets at a time.

From personal experience, what used to take me 20–30 minutes to pick up at a warehouse can now take three to four hours. This slowdown is warehouse management related: very few warehouses are open 24 hours, and even if they are, many are so short staffed it doesn’t make much difference, they are so far behind schedule. It means that as a freight driver, I cannot pick up as much freight in a day as I used to, and since I can’t get as much freight on my truck, the whole supply chain is backed up. Freight simply isn’t moving.

It’s important to understand what the cost implications are for consumers with this lack of supply in the supply chain. It’s pure supply and demand economics. Consider volume shipping customers who primarily use ‘general freight’, which is the lowest cost shipping and typically travels in a ‘space available’ fashion. They have usually been able to get their freight moved from origination to delivery within two weeks. Think about how you get your packages from Amazon. Even without paying for Prime, you usually get your stuff in a week. The majority of freight travels at this low cost, ‘no guarantee of delivery date’ way, and for the most part it’s been fine for both shippers and consumers. Those days are coming to an end.

People who want their deliveries in a reasonable time are going to have to start paying premium rates. There will be levels of priority, and each increase in rate premium essentially jumps that freight ahead of all the freight with lower or no premium rates. Unless the lack of shipping infrastructure is resolved, things will back up in a cascading effect to the point where if your products are going general freight, you might wait a month or two for delivery. It’s already starting. If you use truck shipping in any way, you’ve no doubt started to see the delays. Think about what’s going to happen to holiday season shipping.

What is going to compel the shippers and carriers to invest in the needed infrastructure? The owners of these companies can theoretically not change anything and their business will still be at full capacity because of the backlog of containers. The backlog of containers doesn’t hurt them. It hurts anyone paying shipping costs — that is, manufacturers selling products and consumers buying products. But it doesn’t hurt the owners of the transportation business — in fact the laws of supply and demand mean that they are actually going to make more money through higher rates, without changing a thing. They don’t have to improve or add infrastructure (because it’s costly), and they don’t have to pay their workers more (warehouse workers, crane operators, truckers).

The ‘experts’ want to say we can do things like open the ports 24/7, and this problem will be over in a couple weeks. They are blowing smoke, and they know it. Getting a container out of the port, as slow and aggravating as it is, is really the easy part, if you can find a truck and chassis to haul it. But every truck driver in America can’t operate 24/7, even if the government suspends Hours Of Service Regulations (federal regulations determining how many hours a week we can work/drive), we still need to sleep sometime. There are also restrictions on which trucks can go into a port. They have to be approved, have RFID tags, port registered, and the drivers have to have at least a TWIC card (Transportation Worker Identification Credential from the federal Transportation Security Administration). Some ports have additional requirements. As I have already said, most trucking companies won’t touch shipping containers with a 100 foot pole. What we have is a system with a limited amount of trucks and qualified drivers, many of whom are already working 14 hours a day (legally, the maximum they can), and now the supposed fix is to have them work 24 hours a day, every day, and not stop until the backlog is cleared. It’s not going to happen. It is not physically possible. There is no “cavalry” coming. No trucking companies are going to pay to register their trucks to haul containers for something that is supposedly so “short term,” because these same companies can get higher rate loads outside the ports. There is no extra capacity to be had, and it makes NO difference anyway, because If you can’t get a container unloaded at a warehouse, having drivers work 24/7/365 solves nothing.

What it will truly take to fix this problem is to run EVERYTHING 24/7: ports (both coastal and domestic),trucks, and warehouses. We need tens of thousands more chassis, and a much greater capacity in trucking.

Before the pandemic, through the pandemic, and really for the whole history of the freight industry at all levels, owners make their money by having low labor costs — that is, low wages and bare minimum staffing. Many supply chain workers are paid minimum wages, no benefits, and there’s a high rate of turnover because the physical conditions can be brutal (there aren’t even bathrooms for truckers waiting hours at ports because the port owners won’t pay for them. The truckers aren’t port employees and port owners are only legally required to pay for bathroom facilities for their employees. This is a nationwide problem). For the whole supply chain to function efficiently every point has to be working at an equal capacity. Any point that fails bottlenecks the whole system. Right now, it’s ALL failing spectacularly TOGETHER, but fixing one piece won’t do anything. It ALL needs to be fixed, and at the same time.

How do you convince truckers to work when their pay isn’t guaranteed, even to the point where they lose money?

Nobody is compelling the transportation industries to make the needed changes to their infrastructure. There are no laws compelling them to hire the needed workers, or pay them a living wage, or improve working conditions. And nobody is compelling them to buy more container chassis units, more cranes, or more storage space. This is for an industry that literally every business in the world is reliant on in some way or another.

My prediction is that nothing is going to change and the shipping crisis is only going to get worse. Nobody in the supply chain wants to pay to solve the problem. They literally just won’t pay to solve the problem. At the point we are at now, things are so backed up that the backups THEMSELVES are causing container companies, ports, warehouses, and trucking companies to charge massive rate increases for doing literally NOTHING. Container companies have already decreased the maximum allowable times before containers have to be back to the port, and if the congestion is so bad that you can’t get the container back into the port when it is due, the container company can charge massive late fees. The ports themselves will start charging massive storage fees for not getting containers out on time — storage charges alone can run into thousands of dollars a day. Warehouses can charge massive premiums for their services, and so can trucking companies. Chronic understaffing has led to this problem, but it is allowing these same companies to charge ten times more for regular services. Since they’re not paying the workers any more than they did last year or five years ago, the whole industry sits back and cashes in on the mess it created. In fact, the more things are backed up, the more every point of the supply chain cashes in. There is literally NO incentive to change, even if it means consumers have to do holiday shopping in July and pay triple for shipping.

This is the new normal. All brought to you by the ‘experts’ running our supply chains.

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46 Comments
Steve Z.
Steve Z.
October 31, 2021 7:03 pm

The govt gets involved and the clusterfuk begins.
The return of real capitalism could solve it but that ain’t gonna happen.

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
October 31, 2021 7:22 pm

I’m old enough to remember how just about every little town had at least one legacy factory with a rail line going right up to the doors. Lots of factories and short rail never had shipping problems.

Then came along the people who said that it was okay to allow American industry to be gutted by the Orient, and how “Just in Time” was the solution to all problems. Now those people and their concerns otherwise known as Bog Box are in the process of eating shit and dying. I said years ago that a day would come when the shelves ran empty, and I get great satisfaction and amusement from the babbling of idiots who think everything is going to be all right.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  Coalclinker
October 31, 2021 9:16 pm

Outside of the west coast, most ports are open, up and running and no backlog of ships at sea. This is a west coast, blue state, democrat run problem. Got green energy? CA emission controls affecting and causing back logs.

But here in Mobile–there appear to be plenty of drivers—and trucks—and stacks and stacks of containers on the move, or soon will be. And as far as diverting some of those waiting for west coast ships to ports here—Driscoll says it’s conceivable.

The California Version of The Green New Deal and an October 16, 2020, EPA Settlement With Transportation is What’s Creating The Container Shipping Backlog – Working CA Ports 24/7 Will Not Help, Here’s Why

https://www.wkrg.com/mobile-county/mobiles-port-is-busy-but-not-because-of-supply-chain-issues/

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mygirl....maybe
October 31, 2021 10:06 pm

Exactly. 90% of the problems in California ports belong directly to the Dims.
Ridiculous CARB emissions regs disqualify tens of thousands of trucks from operating there and ridiculous AB5 labor laws economically disqualify tens of thousands of drivers from working there.
Own it, Democrats. It’s ALL yours.
Trouble is too many “voters” in this despicable state are mentally defective.
I don’t see any quick solutions. Maybe the rebuild after the massive crash will correct things.

Adam
Adam
  Anonymous
November 4, 2021 11:51 am

The people who vote or the people who count the votes?

Kole
Kole
  Mygirl....maybe
November 2, 2021 11:07 pm

The author literally said inland ports as well. You didnt even read the article.

Horseless Headsman
Horseless Headsman
October 31, 2021 7:23 pm

AAHhhhh.
I love the smell of napalm in the morning.
Too much sh1t to keep track of. Just waiting for the asteroid (or CME),

Red River D
Red River D
  Horseless Headsman
October 31, 2021 7:47 pm

We should be so lucky. First there will be an outbreak of testicle-eating amoebae, then there will be a global blight which ROTS all coffee beans and turns them to useless goop on the vine. After that, for some reason, ALL the beer in the world will go FLAT.

Then Kamala will get to be president.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Red River D
October 31, 2021 9:28 pm

Quit trying to cheer me up..

DRUD
DRUD
  Red River D
October 31, 2021 11:20 pm

Then Kamala dies, and the last president of the us is……

PRESIDENT PELOSI!

Brewer55
Brewer55
  Horseless Headsman
October 31, 2021 8:45 pm

I gave up glue sniffing too early…

Red River D
Red River D
  Brewer55
October 31, 2021 9:32 pm

P2P crystal meth is cheap and abundant these days!!!

Do we really need all our teeth?

pyrrhuis
pyrrhuis
October 31, 2021 7:27 pm

This is exactly what i have seen driving by the Port of Long Beach in the last year–containers stacked everywhere, but very little actual unloading or loading going on…

deplorably stanley
deplorably stanley
  pyrrhuis
October 31, 2021 8:02 pm

Seattle too.

Ghost
Ghost
October 31, 2021 7:31 pm

This was a very succinct explanation. Thanks a lot for helping us see it from your point of view.

Last year, during early months of the lockdown, I was out and about before sunrise one morning and came upon a couple of big trucks sitting at the local gas station and burger grill. They were awaiting the opening of the meat processing plant, where they were to pick up their loads at 7 a.m. Two of the trucks had been there almost all night.

I had no idea of what goes on behind the scenes.

I said, to the truckdriver, the processing plant should have people on duty to help load trucks, especially during the stupid pandemic. He said they’d complained but the owner of the plant refused to budge. 7 a.m.

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
October 31, 2021 7:52 pm

Is North American Carrier Pool Corp. a publically traded company? I drive up to Charlotte from Charleston once a week, and the vast majority of chassis are owned by NACPC. We like to take the dawgs out to Sullivan’s Island to walk the beach, and the docks are always full. The vehicle distribition port (for BMW, Vulva and Sprinter Vans) loads 2 ships/week.

Being in the biz for 32+ years, the next “environmental crisis” is PFAS. Think mold, but you have to have deep pockets to analyze/abate these chemicals. The supposed remediation threshold is 70 parts per TRILLION. Yes, TRILLION. The least expensive mass spec that can detect that level is $350K. Found one listed company, period.

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 31, 2021 8:05 pm

Why should trucking companies invest in infrastructure if they succeed and the bottle necks are solved they will have too much infrastructure.

falconflight
falconflight
October 31, 2021 8:11 pm

I was literally about to post this. Glad that I looked at the queue. My wife and I just discussed the continued ‘need’ for buying paper towels at ever escalating prices (We have been buying in bulk online for years). Yes it is a great kitchen convenience, but remember when it wasn’t? Screw the system, we’ll do without their crappy expensive conveniences. BTW, screw Xmas gifting as well. Starve they system.

Random63
Random63
  falconflight
November 1, 2021 10:10 am

I think your solution will be copied by millions of Americans in time as they continue to not being able to get products on time and reasonably priced. We used to buy locally produced products nearly 100% in the past. I think the market will force that to happen again, even though the government doesn’t want us to produce anything in country. If that happens, Big Box and Wal-Marts fail, and local business prosper. It will take a few years, and we have to experience pain first, but I think it will happen.

falconflight
falconflight
  Random63
November 1, 2021 12:41 pm

God how I pray for action by us. We could actually bend the arc of history if we’d just take a few steps that don’t even require force.

Random63
Random63
  falconflight
November 1, 2021 1:51 pm

Action has been happening for quite some time. Just because you don’t see us marching on Washington enmass does not mean nothing is being done. Are you here sharing information with fellow patriots despite the elite trying to censor you? Then you are doing something. Are you prepping at home? Then you are doing something. Are you buying gold and silver bullion? You are doing something. Are you growing a garden and preserving your crop? Then you are doing something. Are you bartering with your neighbors instead of paying cash? Then you are doing something. Are you homeschooling? Then you are doing something and protecting your children.
Have you reduced the taxes you are paying legally or illegally? Then you are starving the beast and doing something. Are you withdrawing from every system possible or using it less? Then you are doing something. Have you refused the clot shot? You are most certainly doing something.

You may think your little things make no difference, but when millions of us are doing it, it’s quite cumulative and effective. “Action” is happening all around you. Pay attention and stop falling for the media narrative that it’s hopeless to fight.

falconflight
falconflight
  Random63
November 1, 2021 8:20 pm

All those little things add up if millions replicate. Good post

Wayne K Wilson
Wayne K Wilson
October 31, 2021 8:40 pm

90% of the problem is the longshoremen , lazy m fers.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
  Wayne K Wilson
October 31, 2021 9:11 pm

Friend of mine works for Port of Baltimore. There’s not one job that one man can do {per union rules]. One man does the job while the other goes home for the day, both paid 8 hours…

Brewer55
Brewer55
October 31, 2021 8:44 pm

That read on the core problems to the supply chain gives new meaning to the word FUBAR!

Quiet Mike
Quiet Mike
October 31, 2021 9:07 pm

More Pashtun drivers. That’ll straighten shit out.
“What’s Good For QM Enterprises Is Good For America”.

Wotan Clan
Wotan Clan
  Quiet Mike
October 31, 2021 10:24 pm

Yeah. This whole mess reeks of a manufactured excuse to import more turd world labor.

Jdog
Jdog
October 31, 2021 9:21 pm

It would be nice to think that this was all due to the incompetency of the powers in charge, but the truth is this is the plan.
They are going to keep fucking stuff up until it gets so bad you can’t stand it. Then they will tell you this is proof that democracy and capitalism does not work, and they will offer to fix it if you accept the NWO and relinquish your rights and sovereignty…. The only hope for us is to begin to defund and eliminate government. Once they are out of the way we can start to fix this mess.

Balbinus
Balbinus
  Jdog
October 31, 2021 9:38 pm

Your plan sounds like it will require military type action.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
October 31, 2021 9:32 pm

I spent 22 years in and around the intermodal industry and can attest to much of what is written. Railroads are notorious for hiring the cheapest contractor and working their people into the ground. Since the contractor was the lowest bidder, they used the lowest wage possible to attract employees. There is no room for increased wages due to the low bid. The RR will hold their feet to the fire and get rid of them in a heartbeat if they do not perform.

Our company finally got tired of dealing with the RR and got completely out of intermodal. Many of their purchasing people were shocked that we did not want to do business with them.

GNL
GNL
October 31, 2021 10:26 pm

I thought we had a Just-in-time economy. If true, how come I don’t see any shortages of anything I need or want?

Tree Mike
Tree Mike
  GNL
November 1, 2021 12:49 pm

Because you can’t see? I’m seeing shortages everywhere I go, because I can see.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  GNL
November 1, 2021 6:52 pm

You need and want the right things, apparently.

Yahsure
Yahsure
October 31, 2021 11:00 pm

I heard enough horror stories, years ago that made me avoid hauling containers. There was talk about a port in Mexico and a rail line going to Kansas City. I guess it was never done. Relying on the Chicoms for anything is a bad idea for our country.

Dan
Dan
November 1, 2021 12:10 am

The “shipping crisis” is useful to the criminals in power…..just like the Plannedemic is. Therefore NEITHER one
of these will end as long as the criminals remain in power.

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 1, 2021 12:39 am

So, without going back to far in the chain, this can be summarized as greedy corporations not wanting to pay fair wages and so everything is very fragile. Profit margins can remain at historic highs, but do not even think of allowing a middle class to amass collective power. That can not be allowed.

m
m
November 1, 2021 4:14 am

“Why is there only one crane for every 50–100 trucks at every port in America?”

He in the end didn’t answer the question.
If that was a rhetorical question, indicating he believes a lack of cranes is (partly) responsible for the logjam, then I have a hard time believing it.

I once watched an unloading from a big container ship in Oakland, a little in disbelief. I had to take out my cell phone and use the stopwatch to measure, and found the single crane in operation took 90 seconds per container – from ship to chassis to moving the crane back to touching the next container. And they could’ve moved two more cranes into use on the same ship if they’d wanted. I was stunned.

Ghost
Ghost
  m
November 1, 2021 10:45 am

I am guessing it has to do with union rules regarding crane operators versus regular laborers.

It is bureaucracy, stupid!

Edit: Not calling “m” stupid.

m
m
  Ghost
November 1, 2021 11:10 am

That wasn’t the point. Even if the unionized crane operator works 9-to-5 and takes many coffee/smoke/bathroom breaks, s/he can unload 200 containers per day.
Now if we take 100 trucks/truckers to that one crane, you think the hundred truckers can drop off 2 containers each in one day, even if they’re not unionized and work the night through? Doubtful, I’d say.

JIMSKI
JIMSKI
November 1, 2021 7:01 am

If the OP was a precocious teenager with a raised lip sneer and a catchy phrase like ” how dare you ” he would have the ear of politicians everywhere………….

brian
brian
November 1, 2021 10:20 am

Long story short. This is the direct result of manufacturing offshore, end stop.

This was done by corrupt politicals and corporate heads and yes the average citizen has a hand in it as well. You, and myself included, bought all the cheap rubbish that replaced products made locally. The politicals did so knowingly, the electorate ignorantly, until revealed.

This ‘problem’ will be the new norm, and is part of the planned decline of the west. Communist countries are already accustomed to shortages and authoritarian rule. The destruction of the west, and more importantly the USA, is key to the Great Reset agenda. If the USA isn’t brought to its knees and dependent on government largest, then the freedom gene risks their control over the peons.

The politicals want to pit the citizens against each other and point the crooked finger of blame at lazy truckers, port workers, low skills warehouse personnel etc etc… Yes there are issues in these components but the real problems are those dirtball politicals and ‘elites’ directing the decline. Nothing a few pitchforks and some rope couldn’t solve but that would only create a power vacuum that another dirtball would fill.

Better it is to starve them completely of finances and power. Don’t comply and don’t buy their rubbish. Produce your own products, buy only local and support only local businesses that won’t comply to insane edicts. Learn to – Do more with less.

Ghost
Ghost
  brian
November 1, 2021 10:54 am

And, don’t be defeated by what you’ve been told!
Just find a new use for something that’s old!

comment image

These tractors are now lawn ornaments!

Jdog
Jdog
  brian
November 1, 2021 11:00 am

Offshoring serves a dual purpose. It allows the elite to make gillions of dollars in profits by exploiting both 1st world markets and 3rd world labor simultaneously, and it undermines the national security of the US weakening it as the dominant world economic power.
The undermining of the national security is the primary condition to implementing the corporate dominated worldwide enslavement program. Think about that the next time you become an accomplice to this enslavement by spending your money buying off-shored items from mega corporate big box criminals.

A ninny mouse 'cause fhewshun centers n shit
A ninny mouse 'cause fhewshun centers n shit
  Jdog
November 1, 2021 12:57 pm

Pretty sure you just moved up the fewshun center algore rythym threat level assessment list.

Sensop
Sensop
November 1, 2021 11:01 am

Well, I read back through this again looking to put my finger on where everything seemed to start unraveling and it seems to be here: “So when the coastal ports started getting clogged up last spring due to the impacts of COVID on business everywhere, …”.

“clogged up” … as in deliverable goods stopped in their tracks due to transportation and labor problems. In this case, it seems transportation and labor can be considered as one, not to dismiss the effect of govt regulations on top of govt regulations (fed & state).

I suspect intervention from the Executive Dept of govt will be required to fix this … Yeah. I know.

Imma have to read this one again.

One of my many jobs in a long and varied work history was a logistics manager in DoD, of all things.

brian
brian
  Sensop
November 1, 2021 11:20 am

The main problem is that it was designed to fail eventually. When everything you depend on comes from outside your control, you lose control.

When the system of delivery is running at near max then any small problem quickly escalates to major status. Its like trying to put out a structure fire with a garden hose. If your system is designed around a garden hose and early intervention, then there is a point where everything becomes futile and the whole burns down.

The covid scam was just one element of this attack. It didn’t take much to start the bottleneck from becoming a logjam and crippling the ‘west’. All designed to bring the USA to its knees, the last bastion of freedom. Its literally the war of our day. And the ones that aided and abetted this war against the people were the very ones ‘elected’ to prevent such wars. They have to first create the war so they can offer their solutions. I suggest to turn them off, neither listen to nor believe a single word spoken from them. They are like their father, the Destroyer.