also the pension shit is a different issue entirely. funding a pension with assumed future funds is a scam.
6/7/2012 12:06:41 PM
6/7/2012 12:23:07 PM
It should not be constitutionally legal for the current government to sign legally binding contracts, binding future legislators hands. If government benefits are ever offered it should be under the legal understanding that they can be rewritten at will by a future legislature without the need for negotiation. If we are to be a democracy then when the people decide they don't want to pay for something anymore then they should have that right.That said, it is unclear to me this is not currently the case. The states and federal government should have sovereign immunity, so if the legislature had the political will they could throw anyone out of court they wanted, right? [Edited on June 7, 2012 at 12:31 PM. Reason : .,.]
6/7/2012 12:26:10 PM
I would be fine with that. Because that would mean that the average citizen would stand to gain. Unions are being killed though instead of being allowed to exist.
6/7/2012 12:32:30 PM
yeah. guaranteed pensions from future funds is complete bullshit. its a great way for politicians and unions to gain votes without actually doing anything and guarantees that the workers get fucked later on.
6/7/2012 12:32:41 PM
The electorate doesn't know what's best for them.http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/study-of-14-state-communities-shows-viruses-in-drinking-water-samples-9n5kj9l-156384225.html
6/7/2012 12:32:47 PM
Were the Unions that Walker "busted" only public sector unions, like teachers and police, or were they all unions?
6/7/2012 1:03:07 PM
public. he went after those fat-cat teachers.his end goal is to break up all unions though."Divide and conquer"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BXTEC4btY8http://www.thenation.com/blog/168201/scott-walker-tries-buy-election-and-statehttp://371productions.com/what-we-make/documentaries/as-goes-janesville/[Edited on June 7, 2012 at 1:18 PM. Reason : ]
6/7/2012 1:09:02 PM
6/7/2012 1:17:53 PM
6/7/2012 1:30:56 PM
6/7/2012 3:09:06 PM
6/7/2012 3:12:18 PM
The public sector tends to have different hiring standards than the private. Do you have income numbers that are adjusted for educational attainment, for instance?
6/7/2012 3:13:01 PM
6/7/2012 3:47:33 PM
The right to assembly/association/organization is guaranteed in the Bill of Rights, If public workers choose to be in a union, then they should be allowed to collectively bargain. Granted that also means that those that choose to not be a part of those negotiations can also sit out (right to work).If you tell public workers they can't negotiate then aren't they effectively second class citizens?
6/7/2012 8:41:02 PM
They've already been told they can't not join the union. But in this instance that is irrelevant. In this instance the state legislature is speaking for itself as the employer of government employees. If an employer refuses to deal with a union that is their right under freedom of association in the Bill of Rights. This isn't the legislature barring private employers from negotiating with a union if they choose, it is the legislature issuing orders to its own managers not to negotiate. It would be a bit absurd to suggest the government shouldn't have authority over itself.
6/7/2012 8:59:33 PM
I already said that I thought workers could choose not to associate with the union.Certainly, the legislature can choose not to negotiate, but the union could choose the same thing.That doesn't change the fact that public workers that choose to unionize should be allowed to collectively bargain.
6/7/2012 9:14:00 PM
6/7/2012 9:46:50 PM
I'll concede that our two other arguments that you referenced are irrelevant to the topic.With regard to our argument regarding how tax cuts affect budgets and deficits, could you explain how tax cuts help to balance budgets or decrease deficits?
6/8/2012 12:28:43 AM
Where did I say the government should be forced to negotiate? Rereading I specifically mentioned both sides could choose not to negotiate. As usual, you are quote bombing while barely reading what others have wrote. Do yourself a favor, take the time you normally use to write those posts to go back and reread what you normally just skim over. Wipe the foam from your mouth and then attempt to post something that adds to the conversation.
6/8/2012 6:35:40 AM
this corrupt cocksucker is going to be the next republican superstar, too.
6/8/2012 12:03:51 PM
There is still a chance he ends up in prison. . . .
6/8/2012 1:36:36 PM
6/8/2012 8:01:09 PM
http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/how-much-did-money-matter-in-the-wisconsin-recall/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+OTB+%28Outside+The+Beltway+|+OTB%29Good read on the mighty money advantage Walker had. Most interestingly is the link at the bottom that points out that Wisconsin law gives a sitting governor a massive advantage in fundraising by capping donations from an individual donor to $10k for his opponent but no so cap for donations to the incumbent.
6/9/2012 10:26:59 AM
That's fucking dumb as hell.
6/9/2012 7:40:49 PM
^^ The government is clearly unbiased when it makes rules. We should clearly have more government rules!
6/10/2012 6:57:29 PM
6/11/2012 9:13:54 PM
I was using "collective bargaining" to mean the workers represent themselves as an organized unified front, and interact with their employer as a group rather than individuals.The actual physical act of negotiating I was seperating from that term, when i said both sides can choose, or choose not to negotiate with each other.
6/12/2012 8:47:08 AM
Over 40% of public union members that voted supported Scott Walker. Even they understand that the gig's up.Private unions (as long as they don't turn into state-controlled cartels, as they often do) are great. Terrible boss? Go on strike, suddenly it becomes worth it for the boss to make concessions rather than hire hundreds of new workers. If the boss is driving the company into the ground, the union can probably convince a bank or a private equity firm to buy the company and put good management in place. This shit has happened in the real world, it's not conjecture.The dynamic changes entirely when we're looking at public sector unions. From teachers to garbage collectors, we don't get a choice on whether or not to pay them. If they do a poor job, there is apparently no recourse. I don't like when someone can say, "yeah, we're not going to collect garbage until you pay us more" and there aren't competitors in the market. Public sector unions essentially want to hold the public hostage.
6/12/2012 10:54:52 AM
So if this was a referendum on Walker's policies, why did the voters also elect to switch State legislature control over to the Democrats?
6/13/2012 12:10:12 PM
6/13/2012 12:36:57 PM
6/13/2012 12:39:24 PM
6/13/2012 12:42:06 PM
^i know, the nerve of some people. it's almost as if he actually believes in free enterprise
6/13/2012 12:53:58 PM
I'm pretty sure "forming a union with other workers and then collectively entering a voluntary contract with an employer" falls into the realm of free association. So Right To Work is exactly opposite of free enterprise.
6/13/2012 1:02:27 PM
6/13/2012 1:04:49 PM
^^Right to work laws don't make unions illegal, they just prevent closed shops. NC is a right to work state, but you still have unions in place in some companies, they're just less prevalent because unions can't force workers to join as a requirement of employment.Forced association is the exact opposite of free association. Closed shops just don't jibe with the concept of free association. If you want to join a union go ahead, if you don't want to don't. Couldn't be simpler.[Edited on June 13, 2012 at 1:07 PM. Reason : asdfsf]
6/13/2012 1:06:41 PM
6/13/2012 1:09:04 PM
no thats a bad example. a better example would be if the government declared you had to purchase time warner cable service.
6/13/2012 1:15:05 PM
No, it's not. The government is completely absent from the process of a union and an employer setting up a closed shop agreement. It's a voluntary agreement between two sets of actors to set up an exclusive business relationship. The government only "enforces" it so far as it penalizes companies that reneg on contracts, AKA fraud.[Edited on June 13, 2012 at 1:18 PM. Reason : .]
6/13/2012 1:17:26 PM
I agree, if a company in a right to work state wanted to set up a closed shop they should be allowed to. I can't imagine one ever would, but they should be allowed to.They should also be allowed to opt out of that contract once the term of that contract is up if they so choose. If the firm is required to collectively bargain with the union even after their term of contract is up whether they want to or not you decrease freedom.
6/13/2012 1:17:57 PM
6/13/2012 1:20:42 PM
but it has RIGHT TO WORK in the name?!?!?! How can this be?
6/13/2012 1:23:36 PM
6/13/2012 1:24:14 PM
next your gonna tell me that NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND actually left children behind.
6/13/2012 1:24:45 PM
It's almost as though the reason Walker isn't squatting in a vacant school playground is that the GOP systematically misinforms its constituents as to what their policies actually do.
6/13/2012 1:24:49 PM
6/13/2012 1:25:33 PM
so, in operation IRAQI FREEDOM......we freed Iraq, yes? I'd hate to think we just used that as an excuse to occupy them for a decade.
6/13/2012 1:26:12 PM
We need more money in politics because otherwise people would be duped into voting in their class interest.Also, Worthington's Law: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aF8wLg5Asgo
6/13/2012 1:26:23 PM
It's not quite the same as forced negotiation, but the NLRB can force certification of the union thereby making them the negotiating body of the workers whether the company wishes to recognize the union or not.
6/13/2012 1:32:51 PM