Quote (___ @ Sat - Jul 2 2011 - 18:44:37)
Quote (blind_chief @ Sat - Jul 2 2011 - 14:13:07)
i love that your view is everyone in a union is a whiny baby crying about their half as qualified friend who is underproductive. if you could provide some facts on that id love to talk about your views of unions as a whole. meanwhile you indirectly benefit from unions as they dive up wages for others industries and markets. the mythical free market where production workers make maximum for their value does clearly exist. wages are based on the absolute minimum the employer has to pay to keep things moving.
in short, you sound like you would like people to go back to working conditions in the late 1800s. you know, the time when people were sick of working 16 hours and getting paid in pullman credits to spend in their pullman stores and pay rent to their pullman landlords.
i disagree that anyone indirectly benefits from unions
when a union "dives up wages" they are essentially taxing the corporations investments
the corporation responds by investing less
i also think that unions take too much credit for improved working conditions at the turn of the century
the working conditions at that time had less to do with exploitation and more to do with technology
i disagree. when unions were at their strongest the disparity between ceo pay and average worker pay was at its lowest. i dont know why we as americans accept the fact that the ceo and board of executives (
ceo pay) are deserving of anything they want while the average worker is only deserving of a modest living (
average working wage for all of america). so one could make the argument that unions have changed company investments but only because executives refuse to infringe on their benefits.
as for working conditions at the turn of the century, it was the general movement of unions and collective well-being of society that pushed us from 16 hour work days and freedom of the employee.
its surprising how little power the employee actually has in america,
while at will states hold total control over termination conditions,
most states have a public policy that dictates what is legal.
there was a general movement of the betterment of society during and after the industrial revolution. technology only pushed people to work in more dangerous conditions (see the textile industries, agriculture industries).
i guess the real question is if we agree or disagree that any job should pay the employee a livable wage or if any wage is acceptable. because by "free market" standards labor is only worth the absolute minimum the employer has to pay to achieve their goals. and the robber barons of the 19th century shows us just how much labor could be exploited without unions and government intervention.