Don't get me wrong, I think the republicans are being gigantic douchebags, and they could give two shits and a fuck about how it ultimately helps or hurts anyone-- I fully believe they are ultimately being disingenuous about their real agenda.That said, the modern unions are nothing more than parasitic entities designed to fleece (in this case) the taxpayers. Under the Green Bay School District’s collectively bargained Emeritus Program, teaches can retire and receive a year’s worth of salary for working only 30 days over a three year period. This is paid in addition to their already guaranteed pension and health care payouts.http://www.fox11online.com/dpp/news/140-green-bay-teachers-looking-to-retireA Wausau public employee union filed a grievance to prohibit a local volunteer from serving as a school crossing guard. The 86-year-old lives just two blocks away and serves everyday free of charge.http://www.waow.com/Global/story.asp?S=11891208Milwaukee Public Schools teacher Megan Sampson was laid off less than one week after being named Outstanding First Year Teacher by the Wisconsin Council of English Teachers. She lost her job because the collective bargaining agreement requires layoffs to be made based on seniority rather than merit.http://www.jsonline.com/news/education/96349689.htmlAs a cost cutting measure, Racine County began using county inmates to cut the grass in medians and right-of-ways at no cost to the taxpayers. A county employee union filed a grievance indicating it was the right of government workers to cut the grass, even though it would cost the taxpayers dramatically more.http://www.journaltimes.com/news/local/article_6a940044-5e23-11df-91a0-001cc4c03286.htmlIn 2009, the City of Madison’s highest paid employee was a bus driver who earned $159,258, including $109,892 in overtime, guaranteed by a collective bargaining agreement. In total, seven City of Madison bus drivers made more than $100,000 per year in 2009.http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/govt_and_politics/article_24af32d4-13f4-11df-86b2-001cc4c002e0.html[Edited on March 10, 2011 at 1:53 PM. Reason : .]
3/10/2011 1:52:30 PM
^good links.
3/10/2011 2:34:42 PM
3/10/2011 3:41:22 PM
It's hilarious that you are so hell-bent on attacking collective bargaining that you can't see how it is actually very necessary in terms of defending workers' rights. That's why you don't understand why jobs are going overseas where corporations can pay employees 1/10th of what they do here.
3/10/2011 3:47:57 PM
so, you deny that unions are extremely costly? I mean, shit, Bobby posted 4 great links about how expensive they are, especially public unions.I have nothing against collective bargaining when it is done in good faith and is reasonable, and when it is not involved with picking its own boss to award goodies on the public dime.[Edited on March 10, 2011 at 3:52 PM. Reason : ]
3/10/2011 3:50:13 PM
workers dont have a right to make shit cost more for no reason.one of my biggest beefs with unions is how they do their best to break up automation in favor of bad human powered systems.everything from web based account management systems to safer, automated trains are killed by unions even though they would cost less and be better for tax payers.collective bargaining is all about forcing companies and government to keep deadweight around instead of ditching useless people for better people/automation. Do like LoneSnark said and make it illegal to force any business or government organization into collective bargaining. let them strike if they want but give business and government the ability to go somewhere else to replace them.Fuck unions.
3/10/2011 3:54:20 PM
Yeah I agree unions are costly and are capable of corruption, but if you remove collective bargaining altogether, you put the power solely in the hands of the corporations. That is not a good thing.
3/10/2011 3:55:11 PM
removing PUBLIC unions puts the power in the hands of corporations? really?
3/10/2011 3:56:32 PM
No, I mean private unions. Public employees are also subject to mistreatment, though.
3/10/2011 4:00:38 PM
3/10/2011 5:08:19 PM
^I was mimicking aaronburro's post, but I'm not sure what your point is?
3/10/2011 5:10:41 PM
What is Walker's bill going to do about the issues BobbyDigital posted about?And Walker himself has said the union thing is not about the budget, the unions conceded to the budget-related items, and the bill was passed quickly and with subterfuge. It's blindingly obvious that the fight is not about the budget. Walker hates unions, and this is his way at chipping away at them.People taking advantage of a system doesn't mean to throw out unions all together. That's as much a fault of the people who negotiated to allow those things as it is the unions' fault.
3/10/2011 5:45:09 PM
Where free unions and collective bargaining are forbidden, freedom is lost.
3/10/2011 6:52:06 PM
^ the reverse can also be true, try going up to Baltimore and getting a job at the dock.Funny it is that NC works just fine without public sector unions.
3/10/2011 6:54:34 PM
too bad that pretty graph has been debunked about a million and a half times.
3/10/2011 7:07:25 PM
3/11/2011 1:00:50 AM
What Kickbacks? The only legislation that has passed was a union busting bill.
3/11/2011 1:02:54 AM
*sigh* You clearly haven't been paying attention. http://videocafe.crooksandliars.com/heather/walker-paying-back-koch-brothers-wisconsin Cue burro to rush in here and play the "A politician helping those whom got him elected? That never happens!" Or something equally sarcastic and pedantic...
3/11/2011 1:29:06 AM
$43,000 is chump change in terms of campaign contributions, and you're high off your mind if you think that Walker is doing this all as a giveaway to a couple of guys who contributed less than one half of 1% of the money he raised in the past election cycle. For reference, the public sector unions contributed much, much more to his competitor Tom Barrett.Independent analyses have already shown that the power plant "giveaways" are really pretty worthless, considering the huge liabilities associated with bringing them into compliance with the EPA. And the "union busting", again, has nothing to do with private sector unions. Try again.
3/11/2011 2:32:00 AM
But surely you see the inherent connection between these billionaire right-wing activists getting involved and Walker's tireless effort to destroy the public unions that didn't support his campaign. While not linear, it's all a part of the right's objective to destroy the left while making substantial monetary gains for their already rich backers. I'll be honest here, I don't have a particularly strong feeling for or against public sector collective bargaining but rather the insipid nature of the right to gin up hysteria under the guise of fiscal crisis in order to ram through their non-monetary agendas.Personally, I am more concerned about this allegation that Walker appointed someone with little to no regard for environmental regulations and is against clean energy because it detracts (once again) from his oil tycoon pals.
3/11/2011 5:00:30 AM
Lots of unfounded allegations being thrown around. Be careful about getting too caught up in them. The Koch brothers are dyed in the wool libertarians. They are no different from George Soros in their massive political spending. If you actually look at the money they spend and where it goes, it is an ideological thing for them as opposed to trying to buy off politicians. If they wanted special favors from government, there are much easier ways of bribing people in power. Their motives are not nearly so nefarious; they just think that low taxes and deregulation are the key to economic growth.
3/11/2011 5:26:23 AM
How do you know that?
3/11/2011 6:34:36 AM
3/11/2011 10:39:53 AM
Where are you getting $1.7BILLIONSCARYCAPS? I'm seeing $130millionnotsoscarycaps for this year with another $120millionmoderatelyscarycaps added thanks to Walker's tax breaks for his conservative pals. This is what I found in a pinch. I'm sure you'll play the "blame the source game" if you can't refute it: http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2011/02/unions_arent_to_blame_for_wisc.html
3/11/2011 11:12:43 AM
aaronburro and HockeyRoman are like the same poster on opposite extreme sides of the political spectrum.it's kind of funny.
3/11/2011 11:19:28 AM
That makes me sad. I am not pro-union or an ardent shill for the left. It just makes me sick seeing the right act in such a manner and not get called out for it. Take away collective bargaining? Hell if I care, but be honest about it (much like that one republican chap was) and say that this was a measure to try and ensure that Obama (or other democrats) don't get re-elected. As I previously stated, what bothers me the most about Walker is in his haste to appease his Koch Brother Overlords he's trampling environmental protection to do so.Also, I've read enough of burro's drivel over the years to know how to mock him effectively. [Edited on March 11, 2011 at 11:31 AM. Reason : .]
3/11/2011 11:28:03 AM
let me tell you about why we don't need unions from my experience being a privileged male engineer.
3/11/2011 12:39:06 PM
3/11/2011 5:47:28 PM
Palin:"Well, it is these union bosses' responsibility to turn down the rhetoric and start getting truth out there so that nobody gets hurt."[Edited on March 11, 2011 at 6:00 PM. Reason : .]
3/11/2011 5:58:37 PM
"I agree!"
3/11/2011 11:53:20 PM
So how extreme is the bill passed last night? Not very, at least in comparison to other states. Here’s Josh Barro of the Manhattan Institute: Wisconsin’s new policies on public-employee relations will not be especially unusual. Only 26 states have laws that grant collective-bargaining privileges to substantially all public employees. Twelve have laws that give collective bargaining to some workers, and twelve have no statewide collective-bargaining law at all, though some municipalities may grant bargaining rights in those states.What about federal workers? They have comparatively strict limits on collective bargaining privileges too. Here’s Barro again: Federal workers have very limited collective bargaining rights—and Obama has not been shy about exploiting that weakness. He's using the budget process to push a two-year freeze on federal workers' pay, without any buy-in from the unions. If he were governor of Wisconsin, he'd have to get union heads in a room and plead with them to allow the freeze.So is President Obama also some sort of anti-union extremist, committed to exploiting workers’ weaknesses and attacking families and generally being the sort of anti-union thug that so many labor supporters seem intent on portraying Walker as? Somehow I’m guessing the answer is no.http://reason.com/blog/2011/03/10/the-extreme-bill-in-wisconsin
3/12/2011 12:02:21 PM
3/12/2011 1:59:59 PM
Protesters attend the rally for the returning "Fab 14" Democratic senators at Capitol Square in Madison, Wisconsin. Photograph: Steve Apps/APhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/mar/13/democratic-republican-senators-wisconsin-dispute[Edited on March 13, 2011 at 4:39 PM. Reason : ]
3/13/2011 4:33:03 PM
3/15/2011 11:08:23 PM
3/24/2011 9:56:59 PM