US ports longshoremen’s strike (East and Gulf coasts)

They were probably screwed over severely during covid like most people in commercial shipping or the airline industry. What I find truly sad, is that workers of these industries have to strike to get compensated for their sacrifices. Most of these industries either boomed during or after COVID and/or received massive grants from the US government, yet employee compensation stayed at surpressed levels. I can promise you management of these industries had no trouble rewarding themselves for navigating the experience.
is 50% over the next 6 years, guaranteed, not "just compensation"? What makes them any different than any other employee required to work ( and sacrifice ) during COVID? Were they working for free?

Employee compensation surpressed? correct me if im wrong, but it sounds to me as though they, for the last 44 years, had been perfectly fine with "compensation levels" so what changed?

IIRC you are in the shipping industry- i read something yesterday, and maybe you can confirm what i read. I read that shipping costs to ship a container from Germany to Texas

$1200 shipping cost

Unloading ( from Ship to cement ) $2000
Unlock fee- $200
bolt cutter rental fee $500
Forklift fee per pallet - $500

Is this accurate or simply a lie? or somewhere in between?