burrrton wrote:Kagan's dissent:
"Public employee unions will lose a secure source of financial support."
And later, something along the lines of "it's been working just fine".
As if either of those are reasons to take a dump on the First Amendment. Unbelievably weak, and not like Kagan in my limited experience.
RiverDog wrote:My experience, as a member of management, is that the threat of a union is a useful motivator just as useful as a union itself. Otherwise, they are an outdated organization. There are plenty of governmental agencies, both state and federal, that are available to anyone to protect them from illegal activity by employers. A phone call to the Department of Labor and Industries is just as powerful and sometimes even more fearful to an employee than a phone call to their union rep. DLI isn't the only organization, either. There's the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission, OSHA (or in WA, WISHA) for work safety violations, the Civil Rights Commission, and so on. The problem is that the average Joe is unaware of these agencies and the services they offer.
Outside of the threat of unionization, which is a necessary evil that in non union shops forces the company to listen and be responsive to their employees, they are pretty much worthless.
RiverDog wrote:My experience, as a member of management, is that the threat of a union is a useful motivator just as useful as a union itself. Otherwise, they are an outdated organization. There are plenty of governmental agencies, both state and federal, that are available to anyone to protect them from illegal activity by employers. A phone call to the Department of Labor and Industries is just as powerful and sometimes even more fearful to an employee than a phone call to their union rep. DLI isn't the only organization, either. There's the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission, OSHA (or in WA, WISHA) for work safety violations, the Civil Rights Commission, and so on. The problem is that the average Joe is unaware of these agencies and the services they offer.
Outside of the threat of unionization, which is a necessary evil that in non union shops forces the company to listen and be responsive to their employees, they are pretty much worthless.
Unions legal protection is only one aspect of unions. They are necessary for wage levels to continue to rise. Individual workers have little to no power to control wages. You can be the best worker in a company and I guarantee that if you push for a wage increase a large corporation will look across you and say, "We pay this much for this position. See you later."
burrrton wrote:Then, in 2018, that worker goes across the street to the competing company and gets his higher wage. Thank you, free market.
There's also an implicit mistake in your reasoning: that unions pushing for ever-higher wages (which they do) is the best and most appropriate way to help the employees. It's not necessarily.
Some employees deserve higher wages and don't get them, some deserve lower and don't get that, some deserve to be fired, some don't- any way you cut it, though, some third party deciding all those things is not a defensible position.
They served a valuable purpose in the past, but today are as outdated as buggy whips, serving virtually no purpose except to perpetuate and enrich themselves (and with few exceptions, that goes for both public and private unions, although I don't have as much of a problem with the latter as the former as long as I don't have to work with their employees).
How did I know you would see it that way?
Typical Goldwater-con answer.
Employers are doing their best to bust unions, so they can put further downward pressure on wages.
burrrton wrote:"Employers" aren't some cabal working to fck you and unions over, chief- they're a diverse group of people looking to pay workers enough money to help them make enough money off everyone else that they can make a profit, and others are always free to do the same thing in a free market.
Bizarre, I know.
Yes, they are a cabal, chief.
And since I know further discussion will not avail to change your opinion, I will leave it there.
burrrton wrote:Employers... are a cabal.
You read it here first, everyone!
LOL.
You just said (I'm assuming seriously) that the employers of the US are a cabal, so this is probably for the best.
you focused on your comment because it was easy to ridicule
You ever read the number of business group organizations that exist to lobby on their behalf?
RiverDog wrote:Generally speaking, it's been my experience that it's not the large, corporate employers that take advantage of their laborers, it's the small mom-and-pop businesses. I once had a good discussion with a union business agent that agreed wholeheartedly with this view. Large employers are more professional, know the rules, have bigger, more diverse work forces so they can't afford to be exposed as some sort of Ebenezer Scrooge. Mom and pop companies are more likely not to have had any formal training in basic supervisory skills and are generally unaware, as are their employees, of the laws surrounding the treatment of employees.
A good example is when I used to work in our field department and overheard the son of the owner of a small agriculture services company tell his employees that they had to speak in English so long as they were on the time clock. I tried to explain to the guy that his policy was illegal, that unless he has a valid, business related reason...such as talking over an open channel radio, servicing a customer, etc...that he could not force them to speak in English. He ignored me, thought I was full of it. Later, I told some of his employees that their boss's mandate was illegal, but they were afraid to challenge their boss's policy, fearful of losing their jobs.
It's those types of situations that begs for a representative or advocate, not the large employers that know better.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Large employers have a much larger influence on wages and benefits than smaller employers. They don't have to do anything illegal because they can very much get the laws changed to their benefit, which they lobby for all the time.
Why pay an American when you can pay an Indian, Russian, or Chinese 20% less because his standard of living is much lower?....So how do you combat that as an individual?
You would prefer the government eventually set wage levels? That never works. It much better for private organizations like unions to negotiate wages and benefits with large employers so there is a market element to the negotiation versus a government mandate. So many people seem to forget that unions are not government organizations, but private labor groups funded by member workers to lobby and negotiate on their behalf.
I do not at all mind the existence of unions. I think they are necessary given the size and scope of the modern employer. Though I do believe unions need to modify their current structure to offer more to employers. By creating an adversarial rather than beneficial competitive relationship between employer and worker, they do themselves a disservice. I wish members would take a more active role in calling for better work and performance standards so that as a group an employer can feel that hiring union workers is hiring some of the best workers out there.
RiverDog wrote:Get an education or vocation that makes you marketable. Most of the jobs that are being outsourced are low paying, minimum wage type jobs that won't support a family of 4 anyway. Keeping those jobs in our country under the conditions that exist here and paying them 20% more for the same thing that can be done overseas drives up prices. Even if they did manage to keep those jobs in this country, it wouldn't be long before companies figured out how to automate and build machines to perform the same tasks. The easier a job is to do, the easier and cheaper it is to replace it, whether that be with foreign worker or a machine.
The government already does set wage levels. It's called the minimum wage.
Not all members want to fund unions to negotiate on their behalf. Some don't need or want their protection, will refuse representation. That's part of the problem in states like WA that do not have right to work laws. The union can take your dues and use it to pursue political objectives and support candidates you may not like without so much as an advisory vote from its membership, and you have no choice but to pay the union dues or lose your job.
As I said before, if not for two things...the threat of unions and the ignorance of workers as to their rights...I do not see unions as being a viable entity in today's society.
I have been an eyewitness to many underhanded union tactics. The way the laws are written, if a union wants to get into a non union facility, there is no quorum requirement. All it takes is 50%+1, so if 3 people in a 500 worker facility vote on whether or not they want to be represented by a union, 2 yes votes and they are in. They'll intentionally under advertise times/places of voting then be sure to tell only those likely to vote in favor or hold the vote at a time when the facility is down and many have left town and unable to vote. They will identify groups that are unlikely to vote for unionization...Asians, for example...and instruct their promoters not to encourage them to vote or ignore them. And the most hypocritical activity of all is when the union's own secretaries and clerical workers threaten to unionize, the union will fight it tooth and nail. They are no less corrupt and unethical as big business.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Asea, I haven't looked into all the higher end jobs that H1B's cover, but I can speak a little from my personal work experience as a bridge engineer. I've got two junior engineers, one from China and one from India, both have graduate level education with high marks and they are phenomenal at their job. They both just passed their exam for professional licensing. I can compare them to many a student I went to college with and other young engineers I work with who don't work near as hard nor have the same mental acumen. I mean, I remember several of the engineers I graduated with were more worried about hunting, fishing, partying, and drinking than they were with actually learning the skill and genuinely trying to become a good engineer. I also feel like the STEM degrees don't see as high enrollment as other majors largely due to the difficulty, where Asians, Indians, etc.. have high enrollment.
Anyway, I am curious what your thoughts are if we have a large demand in the STEM fields, and we basically don't have enough supply of future employees who have the aptitude for it, don't have a the drive for it, or both, how do you keep those jobs occupied by America's young people?
I know that does cover everything about it, but that's one aspect of the issue.
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