Republicans Continue To Hurt American Workers

OnePercenter

Gold Member
Apr 10, 2013
23,667
1,880
265
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.






Infantile arguments only prove that you are an infant dude. Try doing some research and you will see what the real cause was for the collapse. That being said the upper level management are certainly guilty of some level of fraud. What do you want to bet that they donated to Dems more than Repubs?
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.
Simply a chain-reaction from Democrats constantly forcing businesses to pay higher wages.
Democrats don't care what works.
They just push stuff that sounds good to voters.
Democrats are always raising the cost of living by passing higher and higher taxes.
Then they campaign on raising the minimum-wage to compensate for all of the massive over-taxation they force down everyone's throats.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.

You are not the most interesting man in the world.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.

Infantile arguments only prove that you are an infant dude. Try doing some research and you will see what the real cause was for the collapse. That being said the upper level management are certainly guilty of some level of fraud. What do you want to bet that they donated to Dems more than Repubs?

Why do you hate the American Worker? The issue is funding employees equally with investors.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.
Simply a chain-reaction from Democrats constantly forcing businesses to pay higher wages.
Democrats don't care what works.
They just push stuff that sounds good to voters.
Democrats are always raising the cost of living by passing higher and higher taxes.
Then they campaign on raising the minimum-wage to compensate for all of the massive over-taxation they force down everyone's throats.

Bashing the American Worker doesn't work. It doesn't work for you, your family, and your friends. Why do you continue to support a party that hates you?
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.

You are not the most interesting man in the world.

That's because you don't know me.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.

Infantile arguments only prove that you are an infant dude. Try doing some research and you will see what the real cause was for the collapse. That being said the upper level management are certainly guilty of some level of fraud. What do you want to bet that they donated to Dems more than Repubs?

Why do you hate the American Worker? The issue is funding employees equally with investors.






I don't. I actually like them unlike you socialist assholes who want them to be beat down to the lowest common denominator to where there are only two classes of people in this country, the wealthy elite, and the peons.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.
Simply a chain-reaction from Democrats constantly forcing businesses to pay higher wages.
Democrats don't care what works.
They just push stuff that sounds good to voters.
Democrats are always raising the cost of living by passing higher and higher taxes.
Then they campaign on raising the minimum-wage to compensate for all of the massive over-taxation they force down everyone's throats.

Bashing the American Worker doesn't work. It doesn't work for you, your family, and your friends. Why do you continue to support a party that hates you?
Dude, You're the Democrap, not me.....
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.

You are not the most interesting man in the world.

That's because you don't know me.

One post was enough.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.

Infantile arguments only prove that you are an infant dude. Try doing some research and you will see what the real cause was for the collapse. That being said the upper level management are certainly guilty of some level of fraud. What do you want to bet that they donated to Dems more than Repubs?

Why do you hate the American Worker? The issue is funding employees equally with investors.


I don't. I actually like them unlike you socialist assholes who want them to be beat down to the lowest common denominator to where there are only two classes of people in this country, the wealthy elite, and the peons.

If you don't hate the American worker, why do you continue to support the Republican party that does hate the American worker?
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.
Simply a chain-reaction from Democrats constantly forcing businesses to pay higher wages.
Democrats don't care what works.
They just push stuff that sounds good to voters.
Democrats are always raising the cost of living by passing higher and higher taxes.
Then they campaign on raising the minimum-wage to compensate for all of the massive over-taxation they force down everyone's throats.

Bashing the American Worker doesn't work. It doesn't work for you, your family, and your friends. Why do you continue to support a party that hates you?
Dude, You're the Democrap, not me.....

You continue to vote against the best interest of yourself, your family, and your friends. Don't you feel proud?
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.

“Do” to?
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.
Simply a chain-reaction from Democrats constantly forcing businesses to pay higher wages.
Democrats don't care what works.
They just push stuff that sounds good to voters.
Democrats are always raising the cost of living by passing higher and higher taxes.
Then they campaign on raising the minimum-wage to compensate for all of the massive over-taxation they force down everyone's throats.

Bashing the American Worker doesn't work. It doesn't work for you, your family, and your friends. Why do you continue to support a party that hates you?
Dude, You're the Democrap, not me.....

You continue to vote against the best interest of yourself, your family, and your friends. Don't you feel proud?

You claim to be a <cough> “one percenter,” yet you are always posting stuff against your best interests.
 
Republicans ARE THE WORKERS you mindless drone.

Democrooks are the parasites carried along by the republican workers who actually produce things.

.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.

Infantile arguments only prove that you are an infant dude. Try doing some research and you will see what the real cause was for the collapse. That being said the upper level management are certainly guilty of some level of fraud. What do you want to bet that they donated to Dems more than Repubs?

Why do you hate the American Worker? The issue is funding employees equally with investors.


I don't. I actually like them unlike you socialist assholes who want them to be beat down to the lowest common denominator to where there are only two classes of people in this country, the wealthy elite, and the peons.

If you don't hate the American worker, why do you continue to support the Republican party that does hate the American worker?






Because it is the democrat Party that arguably hates the American worker. They insist on letting millions of illegal aliens invade this country and the primary effect of that policy is to artificially lower the average wage of ALL Americans because the employers know they can always get cheapo labor thanks to democrat policy.
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.
Simply a chain-reaction from Democrats constantly forcing businesses to pay higher wages.
Democrats don't care what works.
They just push stuff that sounds good to voters.
Democrats are always raising the cost of living by passing higher and higher taxes.
Then they campaign on raising the minimum-wage to compensate for all of the massive over-taxation they force down everyone's throats.

Bashing the American Worker doesn't work. It doesn't work for you, your family, and your friends. Why do you continue to support a party that hates you?
Dude, You're the Democrap, not me.....

You continue to vote against the best interest of yourself, your family, and your friends. Don't you feel proud?

You claim to be a <cough> “one percenter,” yet you are always posting stuff against your best interests.






That's because he is a liar. I've proven he has lied on multiple occasions. He is an antifa twat living in his moms basement, and nothing more.
 
All of the facts and number point to a very good future for American workers...so don't let the left fool you...they will try from now until the 2020 election.....don't fall for it.....
 
This time pensions. As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

As a grocery chain is dismantled, investors recover their money. Worker pensions are short millions.

"MUNCIE, Ind. — Once the Marsh Supermarkets chain began to falter a few years ago, its owner, a private-equity firm, began selling off the vast retail empire, piece by piece. The company sold more than 100 convenience stores. It sold the pharmacies. It closed some of the 115 grocery stores, having previously auctioned off their real estate. Then, in May 2017, the company announced the closure of the remaining 44 stores.

Marsh Supermarkets, founded in 1931, had at last filed for bankruptcy.

“It was a long, slow decline,” said Amy Gerken, formerly an assistant office manager at one of the stores. Sun Capital Partners, the private-equity firm that owned Marsh, “didn’t really know how grocery stores work. We’d joke about them being on a yacht without even knowing what a UPC code is. But they didn’t treat employees right, and since the bankruptcy, everyone is out for their blood.”

The anger arises because although the sell-off allowed Sun Capital and its investors to recover their money and then some, the company entered bankruptcy leaving unpaid more than $80 million in debts to workers’ severance and pensions."


"Last year, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) introduced a bill that would give pensions higher priority in bankruptcy payouts. He said that in 2016 alone, 146,000 pensioners overall had seen cuts to their benefits. It did not win passage."

Do to Republicans.
Simply a chain-reaction from Democrats constantly forcing businesses to pay higher wages.
Democrats don't care what works.
They just push stuff that sounds good to voters.
Democrats are always raising the cost of living by passing higher and higher taxes.
Then they campaign on raising the minimum-wage to compensate for all of the massive over-taxation they force down everyone's throats.

Bashing the American Worker doesn't work. It doesn't work for you, your family, and your friends. Why do you continue to support a party that hates you?
Dude, You're the Democrap, not me.....

You continue to vote against the best interest of yourself, your family, and your friends. Don't you feel proud?

You claim to be a <cough> “one percenter,” yet you are always posting stuff against your best interests.

Not so. My businesses and investments make monies from consumer spending. It's in my best interest if consumers make a living wage. Tax wise, I can thank you and the other idiots voting Republican. By the way, it's 2019, how are the tRump tax cuts working for you?
 
Republicans ARE THE WORKERS you mindless drone.

Democrooks are the parasites carried along by the republican workers who actually produce things.

.

The American workforce far and exceeds those registered with the Republican party. Next!
 

Forum List

Back
Top