Wow, thats out of left field. Louisville is where it all started. Hell it was my first job.
Yeah.... Louisville has Amazon, Ford, Humana, G/E, and UPS. I think they will do just fine. Lexington on the other hand, not a damn thing.Good, Louisville doesn’t deserve it.
I don't think you understand the difference between the jobs that are leaving and what jobs Amazon, Ford. GE and UPS have here. There are very specific reasons they are moving and they are due to state politics for the last 30 years. Our politicians have wanted to a be low wage, manual labor state. ATL is a global city that attracts talent from around the world. We have been in the top 5 poorest states my entire life and Georgia has climbed out of the top 10 and is moving out of the top 15.Yeah.... Louisville has Amazon, Ford, Humana, G/E, and UPS. I think they will do just fine. Lexington on the other hand, not a damn thing.
Yeah.... Louisville has Amazon, Ford, Humana, G/E, and UPS. I think they will do just fine. Lexington on the other hand, not a damn thing.
GE Appliances is headquartered in Louisville. However they are owned by Haier in China.
Kentucky has always had a national perception as being anti-business. This was starting to fade a little then they elected a hard core Democrat liberal extremist. It may have set the state back decades.City in a lockdown state, in a constant state of unrest where you can't host anyone downtown, can't attract top talent (because who'd want to live in Louisville right now), an anti business governor, and pending massive tax increase to cover the financial hole we dug ourselves, and an embarrassingly putrid airport.
Or somewhere else? Was it really even a choice?
Now look down the road. If a Louisville company leaves Louisville, what does that mean for the rest of the companies there? Because they're all facing the same pitches and decisions, without the origin/nostalgia factor.