Another ‘problem’ for dockers was that as containers were in effect ‘sealed units’, they couldn’t ‘help themselves’ to goods which they previously loaded or unloaded by hand!
@neilhatton6018 Жыл бұрын
You take a little for your pot back home, nothing wrong, tis as old as the hills.
@Coltnz1 Жыл бұрын
Recent Luddites.
@Monaleenian Жыл бұрын
@@neilhatton6018”Nothing wrong” with stealing?! Good man Neil
@neilhatton6018 Жыл бұрын
@@Monaleenian I didn't say stealing. If you want to know more about stealing goto the very top, the very very top, not the little man or woman. You miss the target. Oneday you might get there. Do some research. How do you propose the Royal family got their wealth? It fell out of the sky? God gave it them? Ah no! I know what it was.. the pot at the end of the rainbow! I stand corrected. Now.. Where's a rainbow when you need one.
@decekfrokfr3mdx Жыл бұрын
@@neilhatton6018 The fact that someone richer than you might have stolen, does not justify your own stealing.
@finolaomurchu8217 Жыл бұрын
Lovely old fashioned Dublin accents, it's becoming increasingly rare to hear it.
@jamesbradshaw3389 Жыл бұрын
That it to true and is happening all over the world, a great shame to lose all those great accents that made you stop, listen very carefully and bend your ear to get to understand for a little while, they you understand and were much richer for the experience
@username9175 Жыл бұрын
It depends where you go. I hear it often enough. Only the last time in town, I heard it.
@ckpalmeiras1318 Жыл бұрын
It’s nice but be nicer to hear our own language rather than English all the time.
@karlbyrne6021 Жыл бұрын
@finola come into the liberties of a Saturday morning and you'll hear plenty of it. Pop into the lark Inn. One of the last decent pubs left.
@gomey70 Жыл бұрын
Eh no it isn't. You'll hear it all over Dublin.
@finbarrsullivan8158 Жыл бұрын
I was working in the docks as a contractor around 2004 and there were plenty of these fine men still employed picking up rubbish and sweeping yards.The port company had an education centre for upskilling these guys and some of them took up the opportunity.That's 20 years ago so not sure what is happening now.
@chrisblackmore568 Жыл бұрын
I remember sailing out of Liverpool in the 1970s and if there was a cargo of whiskey from Glasgow to Liverpool, You could guarantee it would be accidentily broken open and all the dockers would be legless before 1000 in the morning.
@larschristensen9367 Жыл бұрын
Quite right. Experienced the same in 1970 with danish cargo ship ‘Sargodha’. We traded 20 cigarettes to a bottle of Cutty Sark or Ballantine whisky fresh nicked from the cargo.
@peterlpool1387 Жыл бұрын
The good days then. I’m on there now and that doesn’t happen unfortunately.
@darrenfarrell-bn2cb Жыл бұрын
A lot Of Liverpool Are Irish , If it Wasn’t Nailed In Dublin It Would Nailed 8 Hours Later In Liverpool, Hence The Saying Pay on The Nail, They Are Old Metal Bollards That Ships Were Tied To In Bootle Port Liverpool, The Money Was Counted Out On Top Of The Nail , Bought and Sold.
@pedclarkemobile Жыл бұрын
0:46 how Dublin has changed! That rusty bridge is still standing on Sheriff St. still carrying traffic over the Royal Canal. I cross it several times daily. I’m sitting in my modern apartment watching this video just yards from where this scene was shot. The men are standing beside the canal which now has cycle lane, footpath and grass areas for people to walk their dogs or sit & relax during the summer. Spencer Dock apartments were completed in 2007 as the largest apartment building(s) in Ireland (and N Europe I think). The whole area is barely recognisable. The Docks and government housing estates gave way to gentrification. The IFSC flourished followed by residential and office buildings along the North Quays from George’s Dock/ Bachelor’s Walk all the way to The Point/ Tomas Clarke bridge. Most residents were moved out to the western suburbs of Dublin but there’s still a good population of old school working class Dubs living in the area around Sheriff St & Seville Place. I chat to people in the local Pubs and there are a few older men still around who used to work on the docks before containerisation of the port. Even though the economy and quality of life have massively improved over recent decades, they speak with nostalgia about the good old days of “the badge men”. Edit: “button men” not badge men.
@gomey70 Жыл бұрын
Used to live down that way myself til 2005, there at the Ringsend rowing club by the East link. It's certainly changed a lot since then.
@Spookieham Жыл бұрын
Containerisation destroyed traditional docks all over the US and Europe. The cost savings and need for deep water ports meant it was inevitable. There is a very good book about containerisation called "The Box". Before containers the vast majority of the time and monetary cost to ship a consignment across the Atlantic was spent in the docks - not the voyage itself.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Containers are not the problem. Government economic planning was the problem in every country in the west. US ports are too small and too concentrated. Those container systems should have allowed the ports to expand and for distribution centres to have formed all over America. Dublin port is too small and is one of the reasons for the high costs. Governments have been given too much leeway without enough political pressure from the unions and corporations.
@theRappinSpree Жыл бұрын
I grew up In Waterford. Remember vividly the Bell lines yard & the crane on the Ferrybank side of the Suir. Moved further downriver now.
@michaelf4506 Жыл бұрын
Ye the cranes blew down in a storm so they moved
@geoffwright9570 Жыл бұрын
Many years ago I worked in a wages office for a large national company. Originally there were 25 people working out the weekly wages. After installation of a computer 20 of them were made redundant.
@robingannaway8262 Жыл бұрын
In the early 1980s I saw the same in a factory with the decline employment for iron workers as NC lathes and NC bed oxycutters were introduced; in the warehouse, with automatic stock management; the mailroom, with the number of emails increasing; drawing office i.e. blueprints and technical manuals, now all stored in electronic format; electronic project management; and the files office. There was no longer any need for the lower level learning positions and over 10 years staff was cut by 50%. The classic was a biennial report. The print run was halved every two years for 10 years. The last year the print run was 20, that was considered the minimum required as interested parties could access it online. A pallet load of 14 year old biennial reports was discovered in the basement and the office junior had the task of ripping off the covers and sending them to the reycling centre.
@stephenconway2468 Жыл бұрын
Yep. Jobs slowly disappear as newer jobs appear. The IT consultant appeared as the wages clerk/bookkeeping jobs ebbed away. Where is the TV repair guy anymore?
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Most modern wage processing is a disaster.
@skelejp9982 Жыл бұрын
I used to be a Stevedore We would load or unload packages of frozen Fish (22-30KG)mostly. Also Potatoes(65Kg), Butter(10KG), Cocoa(75Kg), and Meat(35 -110Kg). We would get a bonus, when loading/unloading 18,000 Fish packages with a 10 man crew! And sometimes, starting at 7 AM we hit that mark at 12AM and then every extra 1000 packages would give us an extra hour of wages. Working in minus 10C, U need a real crew, rotten apples were picked out in an instant, also because U could not rely on them regarding safety!
@niallfoody977 ай бұрын
Were the dinners subsidized?
@skelejp99827 ай бұрын
@@niallfoody97 In Potatoes, we got a hot meal during main shift! Working overtime, in Potatoes, another hot meal. Loading Potatoes was really heavy on ur ankles, because ud make a floor of 6 high bags Potatoes, and then walk over these bags, dropping the next floor, while carrying 65Kg..while walking over these unstable bags..
@deeppurple88310 ай бұрын
You've got to love our way of describing the world back in our ignorant days. Dublin people talking back then is something to behold. They were tough days the 60s, unemployment was rife. The boat to England was the only option. Give a taught for other's when faced with the same problems having to come here. We're all human trying to survive best we can. ✌️☘️
@MrRozburn Жыл бұрын
The impact of these dockers losing their livelihoods resulted in a heroin/crime epidemic in Dublin City Centre in the 80s which is still with us today.
@michaelmoran1964 Жыл бұрын
I used to go to Dublin on the Browning,a Lamport& Holt vessel in the early 80s, good times in Dublin,funny how the dockers with no hard hats ,or safety gear on. the same when i first went to sea, imagine the health and safety in this day and age.
@SaoirsenahÉireann1 Жыл бұрын
Men trying to make a living...❤❤❤ feed their families...
@jamesbradshaw3389 Жыл бұрын
What a big change in the past 50 years, cranes would unload in a few hours what those dockers a week to do 50 years ago, It is understanable that those dockers were afraid of change as they would lose their jobs, it was well known that the dockers in Old London town accidentally dripped/ damaged goods they were unloaded to they could take some items home or sell outside their work place. Years ago you would have seen hundreds of people go to work in one place of work. Now most work are done by machinery even the manufacturing of food, no longer made by human hands any longer of the same quality, years a man/woman/child made gave an extra special feeling of best quality to items they made even if it was a loaf of bread, Maybe it is because I am very old yet I feel and work like a person of 30 years of age.
@charlesburgoyne-probyn6044 Жыл бұрын
This was a problem dockers and families never went hungry
@robingannaway8262 Жыл бұрын
The Pool of London and it associated docks has long gone. The London Container Port is 42 km to the east near Tilbury Fort. Most old ports faced the same, with the container ports being built kms from the original ports as they need deep water and modern transport access.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
The reason they got concerned was because they knew the Irish government would sell them out and that is what happened. The state of Irish docks today is that they are very expensive to process and no where near as fast as many claim. The docking system in Dublin is a fraction of its firmer size and simply has no overhead capacity to deal with a crisis.
@Dreyno Жыл бұрын
The one aspect of AI technology I love is seeing the smug, comfortably off classes suddenly nervous about technology costing them their “careers”. It was all completely rational and acceptable when it was stevedores, checkout staff and factory workers. But now that people who thought they were indispensable can see that they might not be, they’re very concerned all of a sudden.
@karlbyrne6021 Жыл бұрын
Well said
@Finderskeepers. Жыл бұрын
So how do 2 wrongs make a good ? Its not just going to affect the comfortably off, indeed the most vulnerable will suffer the most, again.
@errisgloshfan Жыл бұрын
I’m alright Jack is as old as time, people are selfish and only care about themselves.
@Dreyno Жыл бұрын
@@errisgloshfan Everyone is concerned about having enough to survive comfortably. But not everyone only cares about themselves and we shouldn’t normalise it. In my opinion.
@grahamluna6935 Жыл бұрын
Advanced AI is coming off it's rails. Keep watching!
@christyb271 Жыл бұрын
Docker working since 1917 proper grafters.
@MrMelmott Жыл бұрын
Proper grifters
@gomey70 Жыл бұрын
Yeah bet that fella had some stories to tell.
@mfranssens Жыл бұрын
Were there no combs or brushes in the cargo they offloaded?
@stamfordmeetup Жыл бұрын
Amazing how the new system was far more efficient.
@Azog150 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting video. Liverpool's docks were the same. 80,000 people employed in and around the docks at their height. Now it's about 850 dockers, with maybe 1,000 more jobs at most servicing the port. The city never recovered. At the same time, the practice of day labour was a major source of inter-worker competition that fuelled Catholic-Protestant sectarian resentment and prevented the dockers becoming properly unionised. Liverpool might be known as a solidly Labour city now, but for a long time (right up until the 1950/60s) the Tories dominated by tapping into this sectarianism to win the Protestant vote. It was only when sectarianism declined that Liverpool workers rallied around the Labour movement to try and protect what was left.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Industry was a mess in the uk. It was run into the ground post WW2 by government economic planning. Same happened to mining, steel, auto and general manufacturing.
@liamhickey359 Жыл бұрын
@@Art-is-craft indeed. We're all " consumers" now. As long, that is, there is a cheap and plentiful supply of oil. Cant imagine what's it going to be like like without it.
@mitchell16 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating
@MarkLeanings Жыл бұрын
All I see is these lads sitting on pallets in groups and 4 lads standing watching one working throughout the whole video haha
@Blondini1970 Жыл бұрын
Also, the computer and the automated crane tend not to steal 15 per cent of the cargo crossing the docks.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Those figures are nonsense.
@df289 Жыл бұрын
Times change.Hope all your kids and grand kids had it better.
@shutup2751 Жыл бұрын
no they didn't, politicians let heroin destroy the inner city
@finolaomurchu8217 Жыл бұрын
Very true@@shutup2751
@billscurlock6570 Жыл бұрын
As an owner driver I once hauled Bell containers out of Avonmouth until they went bust.
@androsstandley9195 Жыл бұрын
Docker have always been trouble, management were glad to get rid, automation will be next, too many humans
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Automation just shrank the system to the point that it now has no overhead capacity. You might think it was all market based progress but it was all government planned. Guess what the outcome was increased taxation.
@byebyecitybyebye Жыл бұрын
"machine with the strength of a hundred men... can't feed and clothe my children... can't greet a sailor comin in... or know of desperation"
@owenmcgee84966 ай бұрын
The choice of programmes made by RTE then: it's very different, isn't it? One could say society has changed. But it is almost like Irish TV has become like a Hollywood movie: poverty, dissatisfaction & hardships are intentionally made totally invisible. It's hard to tell if one is watching a marketing ad or a spin doctor's vision, as if spoiling a vision of a consumer's paradise would be an immoral crime.
@mrsinn2642 Жыл бұрын
Who is that man at the end?
@ArcadiaJunctionHobbies Жыл бұрын
The mentality of these fellas is incredible! I understand they are concerned about their future but for them demanding to stop Dublin from taking part in the global container revolution is unbelieveble!
@dhartmannahmed4980 Жыл бұрын
only natural when living in a system that will be so punishing to those without work
@kelzuya Жыл бұрын
You see it the world over. German farmers are moaning about getting their diesel welfare cut when the whole world needs to be giving up fossil fuels as temperatures shoot up.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Their mentality was that they would be doing more work with less men. All that automation was government regulated and has decreased Irelands docking capacity. The relative cost in those years has increased.
@walter3433 Жыл бұрын
01:10 I was expecting a couple of lurchers and a caravan as well
@johnniethepom7545 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking exactly the same thing 😅
@johnberry1107 Жыл бұрын
Yes. Nobody like change. USA has a huge industry like this along its Pacific Ocean coast. Plenty of good people with good jobs that did not prepare for change. Stay safe.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Current capacity cannot handle the volume and has zero ability to expand. Not something to boast about really same for Ireland.
@Thesupermachine2000 Жыл бұрын
I didn’t fully understand, but did the guy in the beginning just say: yes but you have to hire 19men? As in if there is only work for 3 (which there is in the next shot) still 19 need to be employed? 😂
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
That is not what he is saying. He knows full well that they still need teams to work. Less men means more work loads. Ireland has always had an under developed docking system. Automation just shrank the system further.
@indigohammer5732 Жыл бұрын
Essentially the complaint is that they can’t drag their feet unloading and steal goods.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Nope. Their complaint is that they have no input and probably feel that they are about to be forced out.
@noel.w.fortune Жыл бұрын
Glad Waterford came out of it so well anyway!
@murrayeldred3563 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. But probably they work much harder than many Government Staff pushing paper.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
The irony is that Dublin docks was all part of government planning.
@billyrussell1511 Жыл бұрын
Even a computer 😂
@Igor-ps5cd Жыл бұрын
5.06 beware of a werewolf.
@pascalennis9123 Жыл бұрын
The oul headscarfs were all the go back in the early sixtys,
@King.Mark. Жыл бұрын
2024 people live in the same containers and call them home if there lucky
@GeorgeGrabanflee-qp8ce Жыл бұрын
Containerisation was inevitable. The social consequences were immense for Dublin 1. Education standards were generally poor this coupled with unemployment and the availability of heroin in the 80’s led to an absolute car crash. The grandchildren and great grandchildren of these men make up some of the recent unemployable rioters causing mayhem in Dublin City centre.
@paudiepower1407 Жыл бұрын
Your a nasty person
@ByrneMJames Жыл бұрын
Ah would you geway. First of all that was young lads running amok, breaking into JD sports to steal runners and into mcdonalds to use the milkshake machine. It is only called a riot because the culchie gards couldnt deal with the young lads the way any teacher from Brunswick Street or O Connells would have. Second Im the grandson of a docker and Im not robbing shops. My granda worked on the docjs, my Da the warehouse, and I worked in the office. Ive mates that work customs even now and that takes degrees. None of us are thieves.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
The real problem was that the containerisation was an excuse for government to over regulate and it created a smaller industry.
@Seanieblue22 Жыл бұрын
Scary to think the MD was a werewolf back then! Mad times.
@Duvlin Жыл бұрын
For the first time ever thieves was reduced and no need for the cage.
@BrayTube Жыл бұрын
The sad reality is that labour is only ever employed when it's necessary. Any enterprise that can avoid labour will avoid it because employees eat profits, and the working person will always come out the worse in this situation. These men were part of the labour martyr generation who made way for what we have now. Back then there weren't many emploment alternatives for these men and I'd bet a lot of the younger ones left the country as economic migrants. I was born the year before this film was broadcast. I can imagine that in those economic and social circumstances the older man could have looked at the baby I was and ask, "What kind of future is there for this poor little fella?". He may well have been alive when I left school in 1986 that there still weren't many opportunities for me. There were more for me than there were for him, for sure, but not enough to prevent the diaspora. The 20th century in Ireland was a long, slow, halting, incremental, hesitant and anxious crawl forward. I'd hazzard a guess that the old guy is probably about 60 years old, give or take. That's what a life of hard labour does to a man. So at 54 I'm in the region of 6 years younger than him and only now does the difference between us seem so stark. I's hard to spot the increments as they're happening but things have always been better for me than for him. Always better for me than for any younger me. The poor little fella's grand.
@edmundblackaddercoc8522 Жыл бұрын
They would be begging for this if it was the overriding issue now.
@saiyaniam Жыл бұрын
Tough Men with a Hard History.
@MrMelmott Жыл бұрын
Lot of them wouldn’t work to keep themselves warm
@finolaomurchu8217 Жыл бұрын
I'm just looking from a health and safety perspective. It seems quite hazardous. And of course old mutton chops there, could be something out of a Dicken's novel.
@fiddlejohn9305 Жыл бұрын
That was my first thought also. No safety protocols. Scary!
@androsstandley9195 Жыл бұрын
Mutton chops, is no more hora
@derekdempsey8506 Жыл бұрын
@@fiddlejohn9305ah would ya stop
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
@@fiddlejohn9305 All that health and safety over regulation has created an expensive and not fit for purpose industry. Dublin docks have no overhead capacity and all it will take is one crisis.
@davidmurphy9178 Жыл бұрын
5:02 Wolverine
@MrMelmott Жыл бұрын
If you looked crooked on them they threaten strike
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Working in dock is dangerous.
@MrMelmott Жыл бұрын
They spent more time in the early house pubs along the quays than actually working
@AlanLow-wf8op Жыл бұрын
The younger man is Paddy Daly.
@toomuchinformationforu9919 Жыл бұрын
Its like the tail wagging the dog
@rnvaamonde Жыл бұрын
Decade after decade we move more and more towards a reality where there'll be a working elite and the vast majority will be living from the state. Even a software developer like me has the job at risk in the next 10/15 years with the upcoming of the AI.
@TRPGpilot Жыл бұрын
re skill . . .
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
Use the technology to your advantage. The docks and government used the technology to shrink the size of the capacity and now have no room to grow. The problem is not the technology but organisations that lack imagination.
@davel4708 Жыл бұрын
Unemployment is pretty low across most of the developed world at the moment. 3.7% in the US at the moment. Seems fairly low. What's your take on that?
@charlesburgoyne-probyn6044 Жыл бұрын
It was the loss of a skill also born and bred locals
@plasticbucket7 ай бұрын
After WORK they went to Mulligans.
@jamescornflake1542 Жыл бұрын
Fine tradition of turning away the famine relief. Greed before your countrymen.
@jcharles8743 Жыл бұрын
Mickey Pearce at the back
@vincebogdan3368 Жыл бұрын
8:34 how long? Does any of ye lads an lasies get idea 💡 what Ireland was trou out all world, does anyone see 👀 building trou Dublin, digging and ollddd freaking blocks of old building? Yeah all I walked yust this day in Dublin is build(read founded)in 1800 s, yeah right, all that loads of building structures¿‽¿?¡¡!!! Yeah Irish people, not British, tartari , now was druidIrish established suchSuperKingdom as Milenium of Christ our lord,eather they risen after Noa time deam don't know! It's up to ye Irish,not my history! Off us all!
@damienholden2132 Жыл бұрын
Nobody likes it but u wont change it ! Change £ thats the way the World goes around and round
@BrianOh-uc3gm Жыл бұрын
Should we have left it that men would have to go down into the hold of ships to scoop out tea and wheat
@summumesse1303 Жыл бұрын
Yes.
@freemindthinkerezrapound5071 Жыл бұрын
As Tyson fury says what a bunch of dossers
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
They work manual workers in a dock that has since been destroyed. Once globalisation collapses those docks will be a mess.
@lennonberg Жыл бұрын
Progress…..
@anthonyegan59 Жыл бұрын
Ah, the auld Carter's were turning into monkeys , what with all the Bananas and fruit they were atin..Sure , they started healthy eatin habits , everyone knows..A ripe yellow banana, and PT of plain..with a sweet Afton afterwards...
@MrMelmott Жыл бұрын
It was worse than a Fagins den of thieves
@damienholden2132 Жыл бұрын
Ask carl lennon stallin bush Kennedy Republicans democrats money wealth helps everyone l o l 😅 😂 great people bring the sheep in
@brickie59 Жыл бұрын
The Dubliners always had there hands in there pockets.They think they can stand around just getting attendance allowance. The old saying was you never see a Jackyn work or a Cork man skint.
@Art-is-craft Жыл бұрын
They were all workers and did manual jobs. Let me guess you think they should be running around all the time.
@wurzel9671 Жыл бұрын
Ludditism at it's finest
@frankryan2505 Жыл бұрын
You never heard of the "dark satanic mills" Seems like progress just leaves bodies in its wake when its all about the bottom line.. Fucking planet is circling the drain because its profitable, people pushing for green energy are deemed "crazies" in many sectors,all because the old guard make money from the alternative.
@derekdempsey8506 Жыл бұрын
Yes everything was fine then
@philipodowd227 Жыл бұрын
1917 and that 1970,53 years wow He wud have never heard of woke.
@spazzymacgee56486 ай бұрын
@@philipodowd227 woke? What is woke?
@darrenfarrell-bn2cb Жыл бұрын
That’s When Men Were Men and Turkeys Chewed Tobacco, Not a High Vis Jacket 🦺 To Be Seen,