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#21 |
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#23 |
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#24 |
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Originally posted by asleepathewheel
If only it were that easy ![]() Unions are killing the US automotive industry and the US airline industry, and no one cares. |
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#25 |
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Originally posted by Asher
Unions are killing the US automotive industry and the US airline industry, and no one cares. Actually, it's bad management. It wasn't the unions who told auto companies to build lots of gas-guzzling SUV and to forget about building hybrids and other ecology-friendly vehicles. It wasn't the unions who told airline companies to skip maintenance and to ignore safety regulations. Union jobs are middle class jobs. The middle class are consumers. Consumer spending is the driving force of the economy. It shouldn't take a genius to realize we need more union jobs, not fewer. More lower paying jobs mean will end up with the economy of Mexico or China. ![]() |
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#26 |
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#27 |
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#29 |
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Originally posted by Ming
There was a time when unions were needed to protect the interests of the workers. That time is long past... Unions reached their peak in the late sixties. The median wage of Americans (adjusted for inflation) hasn't risen significantly since 1973. Since 1980, the wealth of America has doubled, but neither the middle class nor the lower class have seen any increase. Tell me again how we can just sit and wait upon the largess of corporate America to share some of its wealth with us. ![]() |
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#30 |
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#32 |
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Originally posted by Zkribbler
Unions reached their peak in the late sixties. The median wage of Americans (adjusted for inflation) hasn't risen significantly since 1973. Since 1980, the wealth of America has doubled, but neither the middle class nor the lower class have seen any increase. Tell me again how we can just sit and wait upon the largess of corporate America to share some of its wealth with us. ![]() Do you not see the fact that these "high wages" (and it's not just wages, but the absurd benefits) are directly causing massive damage to the US Airline and US automotive industries? Or do you just not care? Tell me, what is the average wage of the people Ford/GM have laid off to maintain the high wages/benefit demands that the market does not support? |
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#33 |
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#34 |
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Gotta say, I've flown on communist airlines, third-world airlines, and tiny airlines in countries with very relaxed standards about, well, everything. And they were all better than any of my flights in post-9/11 America.
I also regularly transit one of the busiest airports in the world in one of the most security-obsessed coutries in the world (Singapore), and never have to take off my freakin' shoes. It can't be that hard to do this right. Save us, Asher. ![]() |
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#35 |
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Originally posted by Kidicious
Hardly. They tend to keep wages up with inflation though. Otherwise all the money goes to shareholders and managers. Depends on both the Union and the Company, and to some extent what country you are in. The real shame is that wage rounds/negotiations can become highly contnentious arguments between two sides who really do not like each other. This is a huge problem these days - and it is a problem caused by both sides usually. Rufus - I think only the US requires you to remove shoes belts etc - which is another reason not to travel to the country that also wants your fingerprints just to get in. |
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#37 |
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