For years, Americans have watched their hometown factories fade into ghostly reminders of a nation that once led the world in making everything from automobiles to appliances. The assembly lines that once symbolized national pride are now symbols of a country struggling to find people who can actually build things.

Mike Rowe has had enough.
During a recent appearance on One Nation with Brian Kilmeade, the longtime advocate for skilled trades did not sugarcoat the situation. His warning was blunt and urgent.
“If I had one of those big red bells in a fire department, I’d hit it with a hammer. I’d ring the alarm. This is it.”
That was not hyperbole. That was a national siren.
Ford’s CEO Admits the Situation Is Not a Problem but a Crisis
Rowe’s words hit even harder when one of America’s most iconic automakers confirmed the nightmare scenario. Ford CEO Jim Farley spoke out with a level of honesty corporate executives rarely give in public.
“We have about 400,000 people that we need,” Farley said.
He went even further.
“At Ford this morning, we had 6,000 stalls open with no mechanics in them to fix our vehicles.”
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