I just want to see what the liberals and social justice freaks think of the union thugs and anti capitalists beating up reporters and freedom-loving activists out there and sending them to the hospital and getting arested? it doesnt sound like "peace and love"
2/28/2011 3:57:35 PM
Yes, depart at this time and don't be approaching any more, or we fire arrows at the tops of your heads and make castanets out of your testicles already!
2/28/2011 4:10:34 PM
Well, the liberal in me is opposed to violence. On the other hand, the commie fascist part of me is all for it. I'm torn.[Edited on February 28, 2011 at 4:22 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2011 4:12:47 PM
possibly people have been killed
2/28/2011 4:23:02 PM
^ No chance, English bed-wetting types. I burst my pimples at you and call your door-opening request a silly thing, you tiny-brained wipers of other people's bottoms!
2/28/2011 4:24:34 PM
2/28/2011 4:26:38 PM
maybe those people needed a good killin. did you ever think of that? I'm just saying...
2/28/2011 4:43:05 PM
I read this somewhere else, so I can't take credit for it, but I found it pretty funny, and an interesting commentary on the state of some of the disagreements today.
2/28/2011 8:34:16 PM
I actually wouldn't mind if someone with a better grasp on labor matters would explain this to me. Exactly what collective bargaining rights are being taken away? My view has always been that, well, if you can get together enough people to go on strike to demand better pay/conditions, then you have collective bargaining rights. If you can't get enough people together, tough shit. I gather that this is more or less the NC position on things, but this is really a big gaping hole in my knowledge.
2/28/2011 8:37:24 PM
2/28/2011 8:40:00 PM
I've always associated unions with corruption and coercion, but then again I've always lived in a town where there was more than one employer and more than one way to earn a buck. It seems to me that mandatory public sector unions are a terrible idea, since it gives the union a monopoly on entrance to an already narrow career field in a industry that already lacks sufficient fiscal oversight. Then again it isn't fair for everyone to benefit from successful union bargaining and not pay their dues. But it seems to me that union dues will always go to worthless newsletters and lobbyist bribes for issues many of the employees don't even care about, not to mention lining the pockets of union bosses. I'm not even sure unions are an adequate protector of workers rights, since it's in the union leaders' best interest to keep the factory churning along.NC has public unions, like the NCEA teachers union, but participation isn't mandatory. It's my understanding that they have managed to get some protections into law, for better or worse, like tenure after 3 years.[Edited on February 28, 2011 at 9:26 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2011 9:23:08 PM
I don't know if NC has laws that ban unions, but we are a right-to-work state, which means that you don't have to join a union to get a job in a field. There are certain areas that require joining the union. It makes sense when you think about it in one way, because union members pay dues and work towards the collective good, and they bear more of a stigma from the employer than non-union members, and the benefits they get are for the entire workforce, not just the union members (usually). So if you were working at a job and everyone else paid into the union and abided by their bargaining policies, but you didn't, you'd get the reward anyway. Not saying I agree with it, just that it's one perspective. As for collective bargaining, it is what goes into the initial contract formation process. By having collective bargaining agreements, the unions can say that they are negotiating for all workers rights, and they have the innate force behind them that they can actually speak for all the members. When the union goes on strike, everyone agrees. If there were no collective bargaining agreements, then who would represent teachers, dockworkers, or airline pilots when it came time to decide workers' rights? If you and I work side by side, I can't very well go into the boss's office and negotiate your days off, and you can't do the same for me. That isn't true with collective bargaining.Without a single voice representing the overall interests of a group, it is more likely that the corporation (or in this case, the government), will be able to get the concessions they want.I am actually leaning more towards thinking this isn't such a big deal now, even though I used to be a teacher, just because the budget does need to be cut, and if some people have to take the hit, that's the way it has to be. As long as the Republican government there is cutting other areas as well, then this is just the unfortunately reality of a recession. The reason they want to eliminate the collective bargaining agreements is because without them, it becomes much easier to privatize areas that are inefficient (like, for example, if feeding prisoners can be done $50 million cheaper by contracting out certain aspects instead of using government workers, then go for it...that likely can't be done when all workers have a collective bargaining agreement...that's similar to an actual example of what happened).At least, that's what I understand. I could be wrong.
2/28/2011 9:25:54 PM
2/28/2011 9:52:17 PM
Governor Walker is obviously gone mad and now he has ordered violence against the protesters. I'm really hoping the Federal community can step in and intervene before this gets ugly...
2/28/2011 10:02:45 PM
All I'll say is there's a reason Bartleby and Loki were banished to that state.
2/28/2011 10:08:40 PM
While I problem with how unions have affected business in this country, I'm not opposed to labor unions in principle. There's a major difference between private sector and public sector unions, though, and it's a difference that doesn't seem to be garnering enough attention.Private sector workers are paid for by the company. Their wages come as a result of profit. Public sector workers, though, are paid by the taxpayers. There is no economic feedback for the public sector; public sector workers and bureaucrats will try to get as much for themselves as they can, which is not necessarily wrong, but expected. Treating this as a regular "worker's rights" situation is inappropriate.What we're seeing in Wisconsin is what we'll see in other states, and perhaps eventually on the federal level. Literally every single state has overextended itself. Once people are "given" something by the government, they won't give it up without a fight. Entitlements are the looming crisis right now. People can protest all they want, but the government promised too much and won't be able to deliver. The average public sector worker doesn't understand or care about that, though - it's their life at stake, and I can understand that. We're headed for chaotic times, I believe.
2/28/2011 10:18:07 PM
2/28/2011 10:20:35 PM
2/28/2011 10:22:26 PM
^until the unions get their guys back in office to give them it all back.You are too smart not to understand why he is going after it.Is it really such a bad idea to give people the option of opting out of the union?
2/28/2011 10:38:03 PM
2/28/2011 10:47:47 PM
2/28/2011 11:03:14 PM
It's true that unions now are taking a different stance, because they realize what it means to the company to be inflexible, but for years the auto and airline unions and a lot of blue collar unions were what caused companies to become unstable.After many large corporations have failed, most unions now understand they have to take a cut in benefits and pensions (the largest debt issue, since they often continue after the worker is no longer making money for the company) or the company goes belly up. The union environment is not the same as it was twenty years ago.
2/28/2011 11:12:08 PM
Not saying the numbers are right or wrong that you posted, but the Economic Policy Institute gets 30% of it's funding by unions. Not sure that it's necessarily the most unbiased of sources.
2/28/2011 11:14:59 PM
2/28/2011 11:26:40 PM
I heard that unions were responsible for the mortgage crisis.And that they kicked my dog.
2/28/2011 11:32:19 PM
2/28/2011 11:52:58 PM
3/1/2011 12:02:01 AM
no, democracy shouldn't work that way when it's the people's money at risk. You don't get to fucking elect your boss and then demand he pay you more. Like someone else said, when a private union does it and the company flops, the company and the workers suffer. When a public union does it, the whole fucking tax-base suffers. That's the intrinsic difference.and if you don't see a problem with a union holding tax-payers hostage like that guy did, then you are a fool.and, no, 18-months is absurd when you have an actual budget crisis. That's the governor's point. I'm sorry that you think the tax-payer should be on the hook when a powerful lobby goes and elects its own boss and demands pay raises after it[Edited on March 1, 2011 at 12:13 AM. Reason : ]
3/1/2011 12:12:07 AM
3/1/2011 12:23:36 AM
3/1/2011 12:44:57 AM
3/1/2011 2:30:19 AM
3/1/2011 8:12:51 AM
It was moron who said "the people have spoken" was an argument, I just turned it around on him. As a libertarian, I myself am not a fan of democratic processes. I care whether a law is a good law, not whether other people think it is a good law.
3/1/2011 11:26:56 AM
Got you. I thought you were, so I was confused why you would use that argument.
3/1/2011 11:55:35 AM
why is it that libertarians all seem to go to great lengths to make sure you know they are a libertarian?
3/1/2011 1:48:19 PM
I am baffled that this turned into a real thread.
3/1/2011 2:06:45 PM
it's what happens around the power pack when the pack is backed
3/1/2011 2:40:40 PM
Has anyone mentioned that the "beating up reporters" thing was almost entirely fabricated? A protester tapped the reporter on the shoulder twice and he freaked out like he'd been struck, total dramaqueen shit.http://www.liveleak.com/item?a=view&token=d2e_1298976953IT WAS AN UNWANTED TOUCHING THAT IS ESSENTIALLY BATTERYThe brutal assault occurs around :50[Edited on March 1, 2011 at 3:48 PM. Reason : .]
3/1/2011 3:44:10 PM
3/1/2011 3:49:55 PM
I suspect it has more to do with expediency. If someone proclaims they are a Democrat or a Republican, as these are big-tent parties they have not said much about their preferred policies. As libertarian is a much smaller tent, the work actually possesses explanatory value, so we can and therefore do use it as a one word explanation for what is wrong with us.
3/1/2011 4:05:00 PM
I just wish the Teabaggers hadn't co-opted the label, because in the past "libertarian" basically meant "Republican, without the evil part"and with that said...
3/2/2011 3:53:32 PM
I'm sure George Soros supported the other side. Difference being Walker got more votes.
3/2/2011 5:38:36 PM
the Koch Bros. funnelled more money through the Teabaggers and thereby duped more people
3/2/2011 5:42:09 PM
i love how the liberals are nutting all over the Koch brothers. Like, basically anything they can find they try to tie to those guys. It's hilarious. OH GOD, PEOPLE WITH MONEY USE THEIR MONEY!!!
3/2/2011 8:11:52 PM
Fortunately, here in NC we don't have public unions so we don't have any of these problems. Oh wait...
3/2/2011 10:39:43 PM
3/2/2011 10:56:21 PM
Turns out Federal workers do NOT have collective bargaining rights.lol, another whitehouse misstep
3/3/2011 8:28:18 AM
3/3/2011 10:21:38 AM
3/3/2011 11:02:51 AM
3/3/2011 11:03:19 AM