Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller
- December 15, 2008
- From Beginning
- Previous feature
- Show Calendar
- Next feature
- Current
Tags: labor, Management, CEO, greed, cutbacks, assembly line, irresponsible spending, math, wealth, numbers. Add Tags

Register for a FREE GoComics account and get this plus any other comic strip delivered to your Personalized Comic Page, Daily. With a free account you will be able to build a Comic Page filled with the Comics you want to see each day.
With the largest collection of Comics and Editorial Cartoons online there is plenty to choose from. Upgrade to a Comic Genius account (Only $.99/Month) and have unlimited archive access to decades of comics.
Register for a FREE GoComics account and get this or any other comic strip daily emailed daily. Comics and Editorial Cartoons are updated everyday so there is always something new.
With a free account you will receive one comic from your Personalized Comic Page daily. Upgrade to a Comic Genius account (Only $.99/Month) and get all of your comics emailed daily plus receive unlimited archive access to decades of comics.
Tags: labor, Management, CEO, greed, cutbacks, assembly line, irresponsible spending, math, wealth, numbers. Add Tags
Collectible Prints are always available for all editions. Original art is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Just contact Wiley Miller for either.
Information on Non Sequitur original art:Upon availability, the original art sells for $350 for a daily edition, and $450 for a Sunday edition.
All original art, including most Sunday editions, are in black & white line art (color in newspapers is done in a separate process).
Prints are available (black and white only) for any edition of Non Sequitur for $75 each.
Most Sunday editions are available in color prints for $150 each.
All prints are on high quality, 11" x 14" cardstock, suitable for framing.
If you would like to have either a print or original personally inscribed, please include a note indicating who it is to inscribed for. Otherwise, the work will NOT be signed.
About Non Sequitur
Non Sequitur is Wiley Miller’s wry look at the absurdities of everyday life. A hit with fans of all ages, the strip is syndicated in more than 700 newspapers. Non Sequitur has received four National Cartoonists Society divisional awards, the most prestigious in cartooning. It is the only comic strip to win the coveted award in its first year of syndication and the only one to ever win in both the best comic strip and best comic panel categories.This hilarious creation is not only creative but also clever. It tackles current cultural issues such as politics, celebrities, male-female relations, materialistic desires and society’s obsession with weight. Non Sequitur will have you laughing at the controversy of everyday life.
© 2009 Universal Press Syndicate - All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 2009. UCLICK LLC, All rights reserved. Terms & Conditions - Privacy Policy


Comments (27) Jump to Comments Form
fear-ciuil said, 11 months ago
Sadly true.
okzack said, 11 months ago
Sign of the times, unfortunely.
mfboyd said, 11 months ago
actually, this is rather timeless, and all the sadder for it.
ayln said, 11 months ago
top management just don’t see the problem with themselves.. since they wouldn’t fire themselves, what’s a better than blaming the little guys down there.
the heli pad is a nice touch.. i wonder if companies like the big 3 have a few next to their jets..
gbrucewilson said, 11 months ago
Anyone heard of the “Peter Principle”? It is working well at the Big 3 and a lot of other companies.
BirishB said, 11 months ago
Yeah, the CEOs of the Big 3 have plenty to be sorry about, and this comic surely gets a lot of things right … but I’m dissapointed that UAW wouldn’t negotiate with Congress in the interest of the bailout loan – this was labor’s opportunity to show that extraordinary times call for extraordinary measures, and it failed. Miserably.
royman said, 11 months ago
What cracks me up is Bob Nardelli almost bankrupted Home Depot and still Chrysler hired him!
lalas said, 11 months ago
Funny how most of the Republicans against the LOANS (not a bailout) come from states that have foreign car makers in their states.
Wildmustang1262 said, 11 months ago
okzack says: Sign of the times, unfortunely
The word should be “unfortunately” correctly. :-)
robertolopez144 said, 11 months ago
“You Are So Right, Mr. Wiley!”
grazer said, 11 months ago
The perfect head shot, Wiley.
Mary Greenslade
said,
11 months ago
more truth then realized!
treered said, 11 months ago
remember the golden rule: he who has the gold makes the rules
Reynard61 said, 11 months ago
BirishB: “(…)I’m dissapointed that UAW wouldn’t negotiate with Congress in the interest of the bailout loan(…)”
The U.A.W. has already made huge concessions, and they’ve said that they’re willing to make more – so long as their current contracts are honored and their members are paid a living wage. It isn’t *THEIR* fault that the Big Three kept insisting that they build SUVs and other gas-guzzlers that no one would buy eventually. (Believe me, I have absolutely **NO** sympathy for the auto execs! They should all be fired and investigated by Congress [for incompetence] and the Justice Department. [For stock fraud.]) The only thing that those Southern Rethuglicans are interested in is busting the U.A.W. for the Japanese and German automakers, and they’re more than willing to sacrifice the U.S. auto industry (and the million-plus jobs that they provide) in order to do so.
BirishB said, 11 months ago
Reynard – Suppose I ought to clarify: I STRONGLY support union labor; I abhor corporate/CEO greed. However, I feel that UAW ineptly handled the negotiations, and now the GOP and UAW are now in a pissing contest over who deserves blame, but that only detracts from the fact that nothing got done. I also think that UAW should have looked a little harder at the unpalatable solution it was faced with rather than ducking the conversation.
McGuffin said, 11 months ago
alife said, 11 months ago
TOO many Chiefs not enough Indians:D
Corine said, 11 months ago
Bingo!!!
chromosome
said,
11 months ago
I agree with you, lalas.
ninmas said, 11 months ago
danae hasn’t appeared in weeks!
LameRandomName said, 11 months ago
What’s that Raynard…?
Southern Rethuglicans forcing the poor, downtrodden masses to produce SUVs and other gas guzzlers to bankrupt the big three on behalf of the japanese car makers?
Wow.
And here I thought that they were building SUVs and other large cars because that’s what their customers wanted to BUY.
Shows how little I know.
Hey, you guys keep fighting for that “Living Wage”!
Those corporate fat cats at the big three are liars! We all know they have unlimited cash and can pay anything they want, forever!
Give ‘em hell Stickeyfinger! Er, I mean, Gettlefinger!
Gweedo Murray said, 11 months ago
royman says:
“What cracks me up is Bob Nardelli almost bankrupted Home Depot and still Chrysler hired him!”
I think the ability to destroy OTHER companies is requisite for getting on there.
Reynard61 said, 11 months ago
LameRandomName: “Southern Rethuglicans forcing the poor, downtrodden masses to produce SUVs and other gas guzzlers to bankrupt the big three on behalf of the japanese car makers?”
No. That’s NOT what I said. To clarify: The Big Three’s Marketing suits kept telling their CEOs that the “Public” wanted SUVs, pick-ups and large cars – usually to the near-exclusion of smaller, gas-efficient models. The CEOs then decided which models went from the drawing boards to the assembly lines. No one “force”ed the assembly-line workers to build them, but they had no decision-making power as to what models went to the assembly lines.
“And here I thought that they were building SUVs and other large cars because that’s what their customers wanted to BUY.”
I strongly suspect that it’s more a case of what they think “the customer wants” (i.e. what they can make that will make the average male driver feel like a Chick Magnet) and through slick advertising turning it into a self-fulfilling prophesy.
“Shows how little I know.
Hey, you guys keep fighting for that ‘Living Wage’!”
Would you rather see (possibly) a million-plus people homeless and/or swelling the welfare and food-stamp rolls because they can’t afford their mortgage payments and/or their next meal?
Creamed said, 11 months ago
According to Time magazine, GM’s union workers make $71/hr plus benefits. That’s approximately $147K in “living wages.” Many other Americans would like to earn that amount and still be disgruntled.
mike.jones said, 11 months ago
That “$71/hour” figure is accurate if you’re looking at “total labor cost”, but it’s not what the workers are making. It’s what you get if you take all the labor cost, including the pensions and benefits being paid to current retirees and divide that by the number of current workers. Nobody on the assembly line is making $71/hour.
Oh, and before you get bent out of shape about “why are they paying such lavish benefits to retireees?”, here’s why: they promised those benefits to them when they were workers in exchange for taking lower salaries at the time. If GM had fully funded the pension plan as they accrued the liabilities, there wouldn’t *be* a pension problem. But for some reason, it’s become attractive to blame the union for expecting GM to hold up their end of a deal that both sides agreed to.
Jon Sequitur said, 11 months ago
okzack says: Sign of the times, unfortunely
The word should be “unfortunately” correctly. :-)
No, I think okzack had it right.
Jon Sequitur said, 11 months ago
“…the poor, downtrodden masses … fighting for that “Living Wage”… bankrupt the big three … Shows how little I know. ”
I can’t argue with that.
“Are there no food stamps? Are there no homeless shelters? If the laid-off be like to die, then let them do it and decrease the surplus population.” – Ebenezer “Lame Random Comment” Scrooge