Watching the Netflix documentary, American Factory, it was clear why America has and must lose the manufacturing war. We’re fat. They’re compliant. We complain. They conform. We want to work less. They will work as long and hard as they’re told. We work for money. They believe they are serving a greater good by working for excellence. We can deny the cultural differences all we want, but that won’t produce windshields.
There was a complaint that permeated the movie, from the closure of the GM plant that left thousands not just out of work, but out of hope. There was nowhere else to go until Fuyao took over the factory eight years after it was shuttered.
In 2016, Cao opened a division of Fuyao, his global auto-glass manufacturing company, in a shuttered General Motors factory near Dayton, Ohio. Blaming slumping S.U.V. sales, G.M. had closed the plant — known as the General Motors Moraine Assembly Plant — in December 2008, throwing thousands out of work the same month the American government began a multibillion dollar bailout of the auto industry. The Dayton factory remained idle until Fuyao announced it was taking it over, investing millions and hiring hundreds of local workers, numbers it soon increased.
