T. A. Gardner
Serial Thread Killer
Which proves that unions work.
Thanks for playing.
No, it proves that unions are in it for themselves mostly.
Which proves that unions work.
Thanks for playing.
Which proves that unions work.
Thanks for playing.
Then the Union will have no problem negotiating 15 an hour for the union workers
No, it proves that unions are in it for themselves mostly.
Themselves = Union workers
Lemme guess; you think all African-Americans are alike too. It’s the same type of logic.Not true. There's the union reps and the rank and file, otherwise known as those you fuck you and those getting fucked.
Lemme guess; you think all African-Americans are alike too. It’s the same type of logic.
Labor and Management are symbiotic; they need each other. When one becomes too dominant, things start to fall apart. The two parties running the USA are similar; if one dominates for too long, there’s an imbalance and that will only end badly until the balance can be restored. If you truly are Buddhist, then you should understand this fact.
There are good unions and bad. Every time you fly on an airliner, you should thank the stars for unions.
Again, labor and management are symbiotic.No. I think all unions are however.…
…I'm not saying there's not a time and place for unions. There is. It's just today their necessity is in steep decline and that's not going to change.
Again, labor and management are symbiotic.
There’s reason American wages and benefits have declined along with unions over the years; big business Republicans have gutted labor regulations and stacked regulatory boards such as the National Mediation Board just like they’ve stacked SCOTUS.
Example: https://www.epi.org/publication/eroded-collective-bargaining/
Recent research on trends in wages over the last four decades has demonstrated that:
- For the “typical” or median worker, declining unionization translates to a loss of $1.56 per hour worked, the equivalent of $3,250 for a full-time, full-year worker. The erosion of collective bargaining lowered the median hourly wage by $1.56, a 7.9% decline (0.2% annually), from 1979 to 2017. Deunionization lowered the male median hourly wage by $2.49, an 11.6% (0.29% annual) decline, over the 1979–2017 period. These losses from deunionization are the equivalent of annual losses for a full-time, full-year median worker and median male worker, respectively, of $3,250 and $5,171. This impact is due to both the direct effect on wages of union workers and the spillover effect on wages of nonunion workers.
- Declining unionization widened inequality between high-wage earners and middle-wage earners. Deunionization widened the 90/50 wage gap (the gap between earners at the 90th percentile of the wage distribution and the 50th percentile, measured in logs) by 7.7 points and therefore explains 33.1% of the 23.2 point growth of the wage gap between high- and middle-wage earners over the 1979–2017 period. Deunionization has this result because it depressed the wages of middle-wage earners but had little impact on high-wage earners at the 90th percentile.
- Unions disproportionately benefit those with low and moderate wages, those with lower levels of education, and nonwhites, and this has been the case since the birth of the modern labor movement in the New Deal. The erosion of collective bargaining, correspondingly, has therefore increased wage inequality.
https://econopolitics.com/2012/12/11/attack-on-american-unions-continues/unionmembership_wages/
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Yep, Starbucks just announced they're going to raise their non-union worker's wages to $15 an hour. At unionized locations, workers will continue to receive their current wages.
https://www.thestreet.com/investing/starbucks-union-illegal-raises
So, why would Starbucks corporate management do this? Because at union locations the union members and union have to negotiate a contract with the employer for their terms and conditions of work. This means union members will continue to receive their current wages (about $12 to $14 depending on location) until a new contract is negotiated. Even then, it is possible they could receive less compensation, and they'd have to make close to $16 an hour to end up with $15 an hour after paying their union dues...
I was standing in line at Starbucks the other day, and I overheard a conversation between the two people in front of me complaining about gasoline being $3.79 a gallon- as they waited in line to pay $7.50 for a cup of coffee!
To break the union, of course. Unions don't win in Open shops.
Starbucks legally cannot unilaterally give a wage increase to union shops within their company. They have to negotiate a contract. I think there's going to be a lot of pissed off union workers at Starbucks.
Starbucks legally cannot unilaterally give a wage increase to union shops within their company. They have to negotiate a contract. I think there's going to be a lot of pissed off union workers at Starbucks.
In construction and the trades, the biggest reason for a decline in wages is illegal immigration. I know that because I see it first hand.
It depends upon the state or region. Gas in DC is about $4.50 and $3.87 at Walmart in North Texas.I was standing in line at Starbucks the other day, and I overheard a conversation between the two people in front of me complaining about gasoline being $3.79 a gallon- as they waited in line to pay $7.50 for a cup of coffee!
No you weren't. Gas is $4.39 a gallon
I'm not pro union, but I support unions' right to collectively bargain. If it costs them jobs, it costs them jobs.No, it proves that unions are in it for themselves mostly.
It's hard to argue that unions don't typically rape their members behind the scenes. A Google search would produce pages of stories about upper level union officers being prosecuted. My dad was a Teamster for years, and was the shop steward for his place of business. Over the decades, he got promoted to some officer position, where he immediately found himself in court with a bunch of thieves.yep keeps the pressure on companies, although there will always be servile rubes like Gardner to carry their water
I was never raped by my union.It's hard to argue that unions don't typically rape their members behind the scenes. A Google search would produce pages of stories about upper level union officers being prosecuted. My dad was a Teamster for years, and was the shop steward for his place of business. Over the decades, he got promoted to some officer position, where he immediately found himself in court with a bunch of thieves.
The judge looked at his very short tenure, and told him that he doesn't belong there. Told him to leave.
I've worked for NYC restaurant owners who described 'meetings' by union heads where they would spend tens of thousands of dollars in one night on food and booze.
Still, unions are necessary to continue the fight against 'right to work' states.