will not settle for unsafe conditions. True fact.
4/7/2010 7:51:10 AM
whatever, miners totally existwe're just down a couple dozen
4/7/2010 8:54:27 AM
They should have just gotten another job, if they didn’t want to die. No sympathy.
4/7/2010 9:27:43 AM
I dont think its that they wont settle for unsafe conditions. Its that they can choose for themselves how much safety they are comfortable with and how much they are payed.ie. an extremely safe mine would pay its workers less than an extremely unsafe mine (in theory).I always had a problem with this thinking though. Your basically asking someone to put a dollar amount on their life. Couple that with the poverty in Appalachia and mining companies power in the local governments and you are gonna have exploitation of workers (IMO)Why would a company not act in good faith to its workers? Why would a company not act in good faith to the community it operates in?Im gonna throw this link in too. Ny Times has been piling on Coal Mining and Massey Energy in particular, Im not saying its not deserved though.http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/07/us/07company.html?src=un&feedurl=http%3A%2F%2Fjson8.nytimes.com%2Fpages%2Fnational%2Findex.jsonp
4/7/2010 9:28:38 AM
Because it takes more money to act in good faith to anything but the bottom line.THE MARKET WILL FIX IT!!!!
4/7/2010 9:36:28 AM
4/7/2010 9:54:14 AM
The CEO is also (surprise) a global warming denier.
4/7/2010 9:56:23 AM
^Well you just KNOW he is guilty of something then.
4/7/2010 10:15:34 AM
4/7/2010 10:23:18 AM
and you think govt shows that? be honestThere will always be those who dont, in govt or in business. In business you are free to take your money or employment elsewhere. When they are in govt you have no such options. The market pressures will move the trend forward and punish bad business decisions/models while rewarding good ones.
4/7/2010 10:30:09 AM
unless the government deems your shady business practices too important to the economy, in which case they give you a bunch of money.
4/7/2010 10:38:05 AM
^sad but true. Gotta buy votes
4/7/2010 10:41:51 AM
Where did I say that the government was immune to the immorality of humanity? The obvious answer is a combination of free market and regulations, which while not perfect allows us to flex the power of the free market to keep prices competitive while having regulations to keep business from fucking over the little guy.The bottom line though, if a system has humans in it, it will be fucked up.
4/7/2010 11:07:55 AM
4/7/2010 11:15:22 AM
Working in a mine has a certain risk associated with it. Many jobs do. Mines are much safer today than they were in the past, and as technology improves, many hazards involved with many jobs decrease. So, we can accept that there are jobs involving risk and allow people to choose to work in those jobs if they feel it is worth it to them, or we can try to bubble-wrap the entire world to make sure no one ever gets hurt.Really, what alternatives do you think there are to hazardous jobs? Not every job can be low-risk, but those jobs still need to be done. And who are you to decide that a job is too risky for someone else to take? Many of these people unfortunately don't have many alternatives, so maybe they'd rather have a risky job than be poor. Shouldn't that be their decision? I'm sure they understand the risks involved.
4/7/2010 11:28:51 AM
4/7/2010 11:32:42 AM
4/7/2010 11:47:55 AM
I dont think anyone here is arguing against saftey standards for mines, but rather we're against the whole "hurrrr free market do a thing waaaah must need more government!!" when in this case government regulators clearly failed to fix the mine despite known issues.
4/7/2010 11:55:11 AM
EXPECTING humans to act with moral restraint at the expense of the profit motive is MATHEMATICALLY FUTILE.to some of you high IQ geniuses whose level i will never attain, the free market is a religion. dear lord do i envy you!!! for the rest of us, the free market a means to an end.everyday our jails are filled by kids convicted on 3 strikes bullshit felonies, yet institutions are constantly allowed to recklessly put other peoples' lives in danger. lets not violate the 8th amendment on the reg, and then let scumbags like the leaders of this company get away with this shit.i was just thinking about getting long some BUCY, so for my sake, for the goddammned sake of my rational free market stock portfolio, please lets take all the assets and operations of this company and give it to Bucyrus.
4/7/2010 11:57:55 AM
^^But can you with a straight face say that the hand of the market would have done better? Herp, gov't failed at something, I shouldn't have to pay taxes, derp derp.[Edited on April 7, 2010 at 11:58 AM. Reason : ^^]
4/7/2010 11:58:22 AM
4/7/2010 12:03:01 PM
^^ durp durp lets just pay taxes to a government that continues to fail at what it was supposed to do. dont worry, pay more taxes, put more regulation, dont try to fix any problems just throw more money at it.
4/7/2010 12:06:13 PM
4/7/2010 12:08:42 PM
4/7/2010 12:17:54 PM
4/7/2010 12:19:08 PM
4/7/2010 12:48:37 PM
4/7/2010 12:56:40 PM
Shaggy
4/7/2010 1:08:35 PM
Smoking is legal under the law. If they banned smoking outright then i'd be fine with banning it in bars. But this horseshit where its banned in some places but not others for bogus reasons is retarded. Either ban it or dont. They do have the option to work in other places, as do the miners. However, there is a huge difference between being explosed to smoking (which is legal) and getting blown up by a methane explosion. if you dont understand the difference, you're dumb as shit.[Edited on April 7, 2010 at 1:14 PM. Reason : a]
4/7/2010 1:13:55 PM
Firefighters, soldiers, and bungee jumpers choose to risk their lives every day. Why should miners be denied the same right? Who are you to tell them how they should earn a living? We can make Alaskan crab fishing safe, we have the technology, all it costs is money, but then there would be no money in the work and no workers would be willing to do it. More to the point, when you as a third party try and impose your standards upon workers and employers which don't want them (such as preferring comfort to safety) then you engender a culture of deception where both workers and employers lie to society at large just so they can be left alone. But light is the best disinfectant, and employers are then able to take advantage of workers in ways workers would normally complain about, were they not already trapped keeping secrets from the meddlesome outsiders. That is before you begin discussing adverse regulation, where regulations can make workplaces more dangerous, or regulatory capture, where big firms use the regulator to suppress competitors with the result of harming workers and consumers. As mines compete for workers in terms of risk, comfort, and compensation, anything that suppresses competition will tend to make the life of miners more risky, less comfortable, and less compensated.
4/7/2010 1:15:57 PM
socialism would be if the government took over the mine swapped out the management, didn't change anything in regards to safety, and then gave the workers a bunch of tax payer money.
4/7/2010 1:16:47 PM
And for that matter, why do we have OSHA?We have lumberjacks, therefore McDonalds workers should HAVE THE RIGHT to work in horrible conditions for 23 hours a day where hot grease could burn them to death.
4/7/2010 1:17:17 PM
I'm intrigued that you're putting more weight into government defined legality than hazards to health.So is your stance as long as something is legal, it shouldn't be regulated? But since horrible methane explosions are illegal they should be regulated?
4/7/2010 1:17:24 PM
Methane explosions are harmful so we make legislation to avoid them.If smoking is harmful then we should ban smoking outright in all instances. My objections are to the retarded pick and choose legislation.
4/7/2010 1:18:49 PM
4/7/2010 1:23:49 PM
I just feel that that there should be stricter regulations on what happens during the workplace than what happens leisure time at your home where you're affecting no one else. Is that so bad?^The reasoning for workplace regulations is not "oh, you happened to get someone to pay you to do this". It's that business owners have historically proven that they will endanger their workers to make more money.[Edited on April 7, 2010 at 1:25 PM. Reason : quickness]
4/7/2010 1:23:58 PM
Not all jobs involve harming someone else. Why does someone else writing you a check change anything? Why do you feel you have the right to dictate procedure to someone spelunking for a TV-Show when you cannot dictate procedure to that same person once the camera turns off and they stop being paid?^ And human beings have historically proven that they will endanger themselves for fun. I see no difference between your compensation being 'fun' and 'paycheck'. Either you have the right to dictate safety to others, or you don't. This is an opinion, either you can honestly believe regulators should impose upon others, accepting all the costs of such behavior, or you don't. But saying government edict must stop once the paycheck stops is logically inconsistent. [Edited on April 7, 2010 at 1:31 PM. Reason : .,.]
4/7/2010 1:27:35 PM
A bar is a private place of leisure. If smoking is legal elsewhere, it should be legal there. If smoking is a dangerous killer then it should be banned out right. If someone purposefully allowed methane to build up on their private residence and then exploded their own building, they aren't gonna get off scot free. They're going to jail. If smoking is something thats no so bad that its ok for individuals and their children, then its ok for bars and the people working there.
4/7/2010 1:29:09 PM
4/7/2010 1:36:33 PM
Shaggy, I have absolutely no respect for people that smoke near their children and am convinced my asthma is a direct result of my parents. I wouldn't support a ban in the homes purely on a personal freedom basis, but I wouldn't cry too hard if it happened.LoneSnark
4/7/2010 1:38:21 PM
If people don't want to work in such risky environments, they are free to quit working there, or petition (strike) for better conditions. I'd imagine that these people feel they get paid enough to offset the hazards of the job, otherwise they would not be working there. There are plenty of other ways for these issues to be settled without the need for government regulation. Ultimately, if people are working a job by their own free choice, then the job must be worth it to them. If they think things should be better, there are things they can do to achieve those goals.
4/7/2010 1:48:43 PM
4/7/2010 1:50:29 PM
^^You did miss the part where IF the mine had followed regulations this accident would probably been prevented right?
4/7/2010 1:54:45 PM
No, I read that. But I'm not sure why it matters. The point is that it is up to the workers to decide what type of conditions they are willing to work in for what pay. If they're unsatisfied, there are actions they can take to improve the conditions. If no one was willing to work in those conditions for that pay, the employer would have three options: improve conditions, raise pay, or go out of business.
4/7/2010 1:57:13 PM
4/7/2010 2:00:35 PM
4/7/2010 2:06:34 PM
4/7/2010 2:11:49 PM
4/7/2010 2:13:10 PM
4/7/2010 2:18:40 PM
^^ If that isn't true, then neither are the rest. Customers can grow their own food. Workers can too. An Employer technically has the same option of growing their own food. But I doubt they would like it any more than most workers.[Edited on April 7, 2010 at 2:19 PM. Reason : ^]
4/7/2010 2:19:22 PM