A
very brief sketch of the American labor movement:
The American labor movement began forming unions as early as 1840 with the Knights of Labor; Peter J. McGuire, a carpenter and labor union leader, cofounded the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions in 1881; the American Federation of Labor (AFL), founded 1886 by Samuel Gompers; Pullman Strike, the wildcat strike by the Pullman Palace Car Company in Illinois on May 11, 1894; in 1892, the Homestead Strike by the Homestead Lodges of the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers; 1862, first record of the Molly Maguires; 1868, John Siney formed the Workingmen's Benevolent Association (WBA); 1900, International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU); 1935, Congress of Industrial Organizers (CIO); 1955, AFL-CIO merged. I have not incorporated details of the sweatshop fires, mining disasters, strike breaking and other loss of life and bloodshed into this sketch, but it is myriad.
There was a time and place for unions.
My feelings on that:
They improved the workplace for all of us. Nowadays, they have worked the system and wrung for all it's worth, there is little public sympathy for them. They can strike but there are a lot of people behind the lines who will jump at the chance to take their spot. Being called a "scab" doesn't carry the stigma it once did. People are looking out for number one, no company loyalty, no union loyalty, they have to pay their own bills and srcatch out a living.
You bet they improved your working conditions and thereby, ALL your living conditions. And the whole world knows this; that's why they all want to be HERE. YOU may have little sympathy for unions in TEXAS where we are not as industrialized as, say, OHIO or NEW YORK, but I advise you not to talk like that in Youngstown.
I do agree unions need to embrace new models,
JUST AS I believe government, buraucries, and corporations need to embrace finer models, standards and ethics. (Corruption is rampant in society,
so where are we going and what do we want to be? This is the ongoing human dilemma that is becoming more critical to confront by the hour.) A movement for better, more ethical self-governance within unions is in order. I DO NOT AGREE THAT THE TIME FOR WORKING MEN AND WOMEN TO ORGANIZE TO PROTECT THEIR LIVES, LIVELIHOODS OR STANDARDS OF LIVING IS EVER PAST! The wicked and greedy lay in wait for weakness and discension in every group. Eternal vigilance is required to halt such scum from attaining power. When they do attain power, we must use the means available to oust them from power. Hopefully, by ORGANIZING and without bloodshed.
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.a couple of thoughts on how unions work now days...when a man is paid based solely on his longevity with the company with no regard for his productivity or competence, that is wrong...
That said, I think pay scales should incorporate both
quality volume produced
and longevity because in many hard trades the younger worker produces more based on sheer youthful strength, BUT the experienced worker brings ineffable wisdom and skill to the craft, producing finer quality and passing on the accumulated knowledge of the craft or trade to the younger craftsman. This is the original purpose of the apprentice system handed down to us by the guilds of Mediveal times and before. This system has had its abuses since before Jesus was born, so we must once again be forever vigilant. And speaking of vigilance:
...a couple of real life experiences from the road...2 Paper mills...each making similar products and similar in size and location...the nonunion loading dock takes 2 hours to load your truck...the union dock takes 12-16 hours to load your truck...a unionized food processing co...one of the most beautifully organized wharehouses I have ever seen...30 loading docks...30 forklift operators WITH helpers...all hanging out doing nothing but talking shop...24 to 36 hours to load a truck...when a supervisor was asked why they can't get trucks loaded any faster and why so many employees are doing nothing, he informs me that he can't say anthing to the operators becuse they would file a grievance and he would be fired because the co didn't want problems with the union...whenever I would go into a plant to load/unload, if I found out it was union, I would go back out to the truck and goto bed...if it was non-union, I would get a cup of coffee and wait for the dockworkers to finish...about the time I finished my coffee...unions had and still have a place...just not, as many are operated today...if you want to talk productivity...look to a non-union shop...that has been my experience....
Well, did you try to organize all the truckers with that experience to complain together through their own companies to get this abuse sorted out? Were you threatened to keep quiet? Maybe you didn't know how to approach the situation to get improvement? I'm not criticizing you, but that's what I mean about vigilance - it requires active involvement, passionate belief and often years of effort working for answers. But, you had some free time...
t's true that that companies can or do take advantage of their workers. It's true that Unions take advantage of their companes. There has to be a happy medium. The problem is, it's easier (and cheaper) for the company to say, "I give up, we're moving" The unions have to realize that no matter how big thier pocketbook is, no matter how strong they are, they can't win if the company moves.
As for companies moving at the first better opportunity, again, I believe in sanctions, not tax breaks for such scum. You don't give up the ship at the first sign of a leak, YOU FIX IT! More required mediation may be part of the answer. But the very core of what America is and will be is at stake here. Are you committed to stick it out, tough it out, work it out? I see the pendulum swinging away from condoning those who are out for number one and to hell with everyone else. If we are to survive both literally and politically, we must rein in our self-involved, hedonistic, amoral and immoral lifestyles. Those who don't should be shunned and exiled, especially those in the seven-figure-plus income bracket. That said, I think we should move toward more and more employee owned and operated businesses, both small and large. I think small internet businesses should get together locally and buy properties co-operatively where they can each have a small booth like an antique mall to showcase their stuff. I see innovative responses to the internet age everywhere; I have faith in our entrepreneurs.
I want to buy locally and make the effort to do so when possible to make my community strong. So do you want America to be strong or weak? Do you want a real hometown or a bedroom community to live in. It costs a bit more, and I don't get quite as much of that junk stuff I didn't need in the first place - BUT do I want more stuff that means more Americans are reduced to conditions of 100 years ago, to poverty and virtual job slavery? Do I think I can escape while I condemn others? NO!!! Would I revel in it if I did? NO!!! - I want to stand with my sisters and brothers in glaring sun of equality... AND I DON'T CARE HOW OLD-FASHIONED OR CORNY THAT SOUNDS!!! Our hope rests in our constitutional rights; specifically, to this issue, our First Amendment rights: Freedom of speech, press, religion, peaceable assembly, and to petition the government. All rights that lead to the ability to form unions. As troubled and beleaguered as our unions are, they are our only bulwark against enslavement by the corporate giants who already control our politicians. LONG LIVE THE UNIONS - LONG LIVE THE UNION!