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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Corporate America's War on Unions

By Paul Krugman, The New York Times. Posted December 27, 2007.


The U.S. labor movement isn't dying a natural death: corporations and politicians are helping.
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Once upon a time, back when America had a strong middle class, it also had a strong union movement.

These two facts were connected. Unions negotiated good wages and benefits for their workers, gains that often ended up being matched even by nonunion employers. They also provided an important counterbalance to the political influence of corporations and the economic elite.

Today, however, the American union movement is a shadow of its former self, except among government workers. In 1973, almost a quarter of private-sector employees were union members, but last year the figure was down to a mere 7.4 percent.

Yet unions still matter politically. And right now they're at the heart of a nasty political scuffle among Democrats. Before I get to that, however, let's talk about what happened to American labor over the last 35 years.

It's often assumed that the U.S. labor movement died a natural death, that it was made obsolete by globalization and technological change. But what really happened is that beginning in the 1970s, corporate America, which had previously had a largely cooperative relationship with unions, in effect declared war on organized labor.

Don't take my word for it; read Business Week, which published an article in 2002 titled "How Wal-Mart Keeps Unions at Bay." The article explained that "over the past two decades, Corporate America has perfected its ability to fend off labor groups." It then described the tactics -- some legal, some illegal, all involving a healthy dose of intimidation -- that Wal-Mart and other giant firms use to block organizing drives.

These hardball tactics have been enabled by a political environment that has been deeply hostile to organized labor, both because politicians favored employers' interests and because conservatives sought to weaken the Democratic Party. "We're going to crush labor as a political entity," Grover Norquist, the anti-tax activist, once declared.

But the times may be changing. A newly energized progressive movement seems to be on the ascendant, and unions are a key part of that movement. Most notably, the Service Employees International Union has played a key role in pushing for health care reform. And unions will be an important force in the Democrats' favor in next year's election.

Or maybe not -- which brings us to the latest from Iowa.

Whoever receives the Democratic presidential nomination will receive labor's support in the general election. Meanwhile, however, unions are supporting favored candidates. Hillary Clinton -- who for a time seemed the clear front-runner -- has received the most union support. John Edwards, whose populist message resonates with labor, has also received considerable labor support.

But Barack Obama, though he has a solid pro-labor voting record, has not -- in part, perhaps, because his message of "a new kind of politics" that will transcend bitter partisanship doesn't make much sense to union leaders who know, from the experience of confronting corporations and their political allies head on, that partisanship isn't going away anytime soon.

O.K., that's politics. But now Mr. Obama has lashed out at Mr. Edwards because two 527s -- independent groups that are allowed to support candidates, but are legally forbidden from coordinating directly with their campaigns -- are running ads on his rival's behalf. They are, Mr. Obama says, representative of the kind of "special interests" that "have too much influence in Washington."

The thing, though, is that both of these 527s represent union groups -- in the case of the larger group, local branches of the S.E.I.U. who consider Mr. Edwards the strongest candidate on health reform. So Mr. Obama's attack raises a couple of questions.

First, does it make sense, in the current political and economic environment, for Democrats to lump unions in with corporate groups as examples of the special interests we need to stand up to?

Second, is Mr. Obama saying that if nominated, he'd be willing to run without support from labor 527s, which might be crucial to the Democrats? If not, how does he avoid having his own current words used against him by the Republican nominee?

Part of what happened here, I think, is that Mr. Obama, looking for a stick with which to beat an opponent who has lately acquired some momentum, either carelessly or cynically failed to think about how his rhetoric would affect the eventual ability of the Democratic nominee, whoever he or she is, to campaign effectively. In this sense, his latest gambit resembles his previous echoing of G.O.P. talking points on Social Security.

Beyond that, the episode illustrates what's wrong with campaigning on generalities about political transformation and trying to avoid sounding partisan.

It may be partisan to say that a 527 run by labor unions supporting health care reform isn't the same thing as a 527 run by insurance companies opposing it. But it's also the simple truth.

AlterNet is making this material available in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107: This article is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

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Obama Seems Perpetually Confused
Posted by: jncatron on Dec 27, 2007 12:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Or is he unaware that Edwards, like every other federal candidate, has NO control over ANY 527, or what it might or might not do on his behalf?

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It is sad...
Posted by: chomsky on Dec 27, 2007 3:55 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is sad that the workplace is like a war field...
If you don't fight to defend yourself, they are going to abuse you...

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They might have had kind of a point
Posted by: andabottleof_rum on Dec 27, 2007 5:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in claiming globalization rendered unions irrelevant. The case was made too strongly; domestic unions were perhaps less relevant when slave wages in other countries were able to outcompete production costs in wealthy countries. Pricing concerns did to some extent give rise to offshoring, even though plenty of executive greed was involved in this dynamic.

Anyway, the economy is part of a larger ecology, and globalization as a labyrinthine manufacturing network is an environmental nightmare that will be difficult to sustain in the face of resource depletion and climate change. So the pendulum may swing back in favor of unions, not only due to shifting political attitudes in the U.S., but also because of economic forcing. In the coming years, conditions may change such that it is financially irrational to have a production chain that stretches for tens of thousands of miles between primary resource extraction, product fabrication, and retail. More production will have to occur near the ultimate location of purchase. This could favor unions and make them much more relevant. But activists will have to seize on the opportunity and persevere against the stubborn habits of corporate elites. The reassertion of organized labor is not a sure thing.

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When did this country have a strong union movement
Posted by: daw13 on Dec 27, 2007 5:31 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Never.

Unions in this country were corporate managed since Teddy Roosevelt. Corporate voluntary largesse was strenghthened by the other Roosevelt, in direct proportion as grass roots organizations' ability to insist upon government oversite was weakened. The genius of US capitalism was to coopt and undermine effective organization more than to repress it.

Krugman is wonderful within his liberal framework. But he's still a capitalist. Let's not forget that.

My standard high school graduation gift is a copy of Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States.

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No Unions in the Empire
Posted by: peacelf on Dec 27, 2007 5:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's disappointing to read an article about the dismantling of unions and collective bargaining power and not once see the word "empire" or "imperialism" used. Americans need to wake up to the fact that empires are evil and so are corporations bent on exploiting cheap labor and resources from poorer, defenseless countries.

The U.S. corporations' imperialist ambitions are disguised as world trade and, domestically, world trade means lower wages with no safety or environmental standards, too.

Unions interfere with those ambitions and might disturb plans for U.S. corporate domination in international "markets" by inspiring unionization abroad. Nonetheless, the empire will fall. It is God's will.

peace

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Fed Recession and Restructuring as well as direct Class War on Unions brought Labor down after 1980.
Posted by: yellow on Dec 27, 2007 5:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The billions in the 1981 Tax cut combined with the Accelerated Cost Recovery Systems and the deep recession administered by the FED with sky high interest rates and tight reserve requirements for commercial banks amounted to second prong in the Class War on the working and middle classes of America. Farmers, small businesses and Union families all went down as export markets were lost to the strong dollar and a world recession created by global interest rate wars meant to stem the tide of capital flight while high interest rates at home crushed the domestic economy and sent jobs overseas in search of cheaper labor. The entire episode weakened unions as the US economy saw the highest unemployment rates since the 1930s depression as high wage manufacturing jobs left the country at a rapid pace. The 1980s were a period of rapid real wage deceleration even as core inflation dropped like a stone from about 14% to barely more than 3% in a single year and labor concessions became the norm. All the while the US economy continued to globalize as the current pattern of offshoring production, importing cheap goods as the trade deficit grows and absorbing massive foreign portfolio investment to keep up the US dollar's exchange value began its long run ascendancy.

One of the handmaiden's of this strategy of capitalist restructuring was the ACRS of the Reagan Tax Cuts. Nearly $292 Billion in "tax incentives" lowered the effective tax rates of the largest 250 US corporations to 14% who used the tax savings to lower investment rates by over 15% (nearly twice the national average decrease in new capital spending by corporations), increase dividend payments to shareholders by an average of 17% and pursue a flurry of corporate mergers between 1981 and 1984 worth at least $310 billion. Deficits grew by hundreds of billions as the US national debt exceeded one trillion for the first time in 1981. The tax loopholes cost the federal government over $90 billion. Productivity growth was achieved more by closing inefficient plants and reopening them overseas than by increasing industrial efficiency domestically.

All this increased the power of large transnational corporations while increasing unemployment and underemployment which kept the downward pressure on wages through offshoring and imports. In such a hostile environment unions can't form easily. US national union density dropped from about 35% in the mid-1950s to around 14% as Bush II entered office. Only about half the latter figure is private sector employment. Since the 2001 recovery, job creation has been the slowest on record since the 1940s and the newly created jobs are the lowest paid.

Krugman is right to single out the class war against unions in the Reagan era with the right to work campaign. It was made all the easier by the engineered recession, the restructuring of capital on a global scale and the massive income shift from the poor and middle classes to the rich through unequitable tax cuts along with wage deceleration and union busting.

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» Yep Posted by: Philip Newton
otto
Posted by: otto on Dec 27, 2007 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm glad that Paul Krugman didn't jump on the Obama bandwagon. My first big concern about Obama is his strong backing of Israel and ignoring of Palestinian issues and injustices against them. The Israel lobby is strongly FOR defense contracts and against unions too, but more and more Jewish people in the U.S. are turning against Israel's official policies.

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» RE: otto Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: otto Posted by: otto
» Disconnect Posted by: Rune
» RE: Disconnect Posted by: yellow
The beginning of the end of the American dream -
Posted by: thekidde on Dec 27, 2007 6:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
by Ronald Wilson Reagan; supporting cast: GHW Bush, GW Bush, Big Oil, Big Drugs (legal and illegal), The Pentagon, The Fed, War Profiteers, Small Gonads Democrats, Republicans, The Vast Apathetic (maybe just stupid) American Public, Televangelist Money Grubbers (kiss my atheist ass, Osteen), Religous Literalists, many more.

To those who will eventually pick up a pitchfork or a torch and take America back from the "Barbarians at the Gate" - you want 'em BBQ'd or deep fried?

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UNIONS ACCOMPLISHED THIS
Posted by: lifeaholic on Dec 27, 2007 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
-------------------- SHOCK & AWE------------------------
----------DEMOCRATS CREATE WEALTH AND JOBS-----------
1.From Harding In 1921 to Bush in 2003
2.Democrats held White House for 40 years and Republicans for 42.5 years.
3.Democrats created 75,820,000 net new jobs -- Republicans 36,440,000.
4.Per Year Average—Democrats 1,825,200---Republicans 856,400.
5.Republicans had 9 presidents during the period and 6 had depression or recession.
6.Republicans had a recession/depression in 177 months and Democrats in 32 months.
7.DOW—1928 to 2003—Stock market gained 11% average per year under D presidents versus 2% under R presidents. Small Cap stocks gained 18% as yearly average under D and minus 3% under R.
8.GDP—grew by 43% more under Democrats.

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» RE: UNIONS ACCOMPLISHED THIS Posted by: JMTulip
Partisan
Posted by: ClassAct on Dec 27, 2007 7:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It may sound partisan to not rate political comments as equal coming from the “left” or “right” of the spectrum, but they are not equal. Comments of the “left” are from persons, comments of the “right” are from puppets. Nothing can or should bring persons and puppets together.

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Ron the Union killer
Posted by: lifeaholic on Dec 27, 2007 7:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Part I
RONALD REAGAN RECORDS AS FIRST---------------------------
(1900-1989)

(Peggy Noonan pay attention)

1.First to turn America into a DEBTOR nation
2. First to increase DEBT faster than growth of national income in eight years
3. First to increase DEBT faster than growth of gdp over eight years
4. First to double the deficit in just eight years
5. First to “almost”: triple the national DEBT in just eight years
6. First to increase SPENDING by 80%--over 8 years.
7. First to SPEND more in eight years than was spent in prior 50 years.
8. First to have “real” INTEREST RATES of 8% after averaging 1% over 35 years.
9. First to keep PRIME INTEREST RATES at 20%.
10.First to over value the dollar to the yen at rate of 262 yen to 1 dollar.
11.First to have served as Governor and increase STATE SPENDING by 112%
12.First to have HOME LOAN INTEREST RATES as high as 16%
13. First to CUT TAXES by 60% for his rich pals
14. First to allow the SAVINGS AND LOAN INDUSTRY to be raided after signing a deregulatory bill and proclaiming “I think we have hit the jackpot”. Come and get it the vaults are unguarded.
15. First to deal with TERRORISTS
16. First to send an AUTOGRAPHED BIBLE to a man he called “The Satan of Terrorists”.
17. First to have an ADMIRAL plead the Fifth Amendment.
18. First to have a stealing, lying, gutless wife abusing MARINE LT. COLONEL plead the Fifth Amendment.
19. First to have a “sitting” CABINET MEMBER INDICTED
20. First to have an ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE INDICTED.
21. First to have an ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE SENT TO PRISON.
22. First to have over 100 MEMBERS OF AN ADMINISTRATION CHARGED WITH CRIMES..
23. First to have more members of his administration charged with crimes than CUMULATIVE TOTAL OF ALL OTHER PRESIDENTS in the twentieth century
24. First to set a record for the LARGEST ONE DAY PERCENTAGE DECLINE in the DOW in history. 10-19-87
25. First to have over $10,000,000 INCREASE IN WEALTH from serving for 8 years as president.
26. First to testify ”under oath” 130 times that ”I DON’T REMEMBER” .
27. First to have an Admiral with a photographic memory testify 128 times “ I DON’T REMEMBER”.
28. First to undergo BRAIN SURGERY a few months after leaving office. No pain no gain.
29. First to, repeatedly, FALSIFY HIS WIFE’S AGE. As tho anyone cared.
30. First to promote his religious faith and never have an ACTIVE CHURCH MEMBERSHIP.
31. First to never use the term JESUS CHRIST in speeches.
32. First to seek GUIDANCE FROM THE STARS not from God
33. First to have had a SHOTGUN WEDDING.
34. First to have worked as a SHILL in Las Vegas.
35. First to call a Stealing, Lying, Psychotic, wife abusing Marine a “LIAR.
36. First to have been OPENLY ALIENATED from his children.
37. First To have served with ALZHIMERS
38. First to have UNEMPLOYMENT AT 10.8% since great depression.
39. First to attack a small unprotected nation with 88,000 inhabitants and 10,000 bb guns then PROCLAIM -“America stands tall again”— “we have whipped the Vietnam Syndrome”-we have defeated communism”. Gosh! What if we had whipped Cyprus?.

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» RE: on the Union killer Posted by: willymack
#II RON THE UNION KILLER
Posted by: lifeaholic on Dec 27, 2007 7:20 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
40. #1-in FARM FORECLOSURES
41. #1-In BANK FAILURES
42. #1-In SAVINGS AND LOAN FAILURES
43. #1-In Percent increase in PERSONAL BANKRUPTCIES
44. #1-In recorded MISSTATEMENTS
45. #1-In never having a single press conference in which he did not make at least one or more INCORRECT STATEMENTS.
46. #1-In needing a staff person standby during press conferences to tell the press “WHAT HE REALLY MEANT”.
47. #1-In having SERVICEMEN KILLED during peacetime.
48. #1-In largest DROP IN POPULARITY in one week.
49. #1-In being first to HONOR NAZI STORM TROOPERS by calling them” Innocent Victims”
50. #1-In being first to be labeled “BRAIN DEAD AFFABLE DUNCE’ by this writer.
51. First to lie-over and over-to reporters “I DO NOT DYE MY HAIR my barber uses a special shampoo”
52. First to have a wife who ”forced” him to WEAR THREE SUITS in one day
53. First to boast “Not bad for a DUMB GUY who worked only 20 hours per week”.
54. First to have his wife sit nearby and WHISPER ANSWERS to questions
55. First to FALL ASLEEP while the Pope spoke
56. First to invite the Pope to visit the White House and “BRING THE WIFE AND KIDS”
57. First to have his press secretary remove him from the microphone because he could not answer questions. Then, as the reporter
yelled out “answer my question” he replied “MY HANDLERS WON’T LET ME SPEAK”. Quick get the white coat.
58. First 20th Century president to have historians RATE HIM BELOW every president of the 20th except for Richard Nixon. 1994 Poll.
59. First to give us a First Lady with a past reputation for giving the BEST BJ in Hollywood.
60. First to suggest his eldest son undergo PSYCHIATRIC examination
61. First to have been voted in British polls (twice) as the ”MOST FEARED LEADER IN THE WORLD” sic em Rambo.


62. First to serve as Governor on a ”conservative” platform and INCREASE SPENDING BY 112%.
63. First Governor TO INCREASE personal income taxes by 60%, tax increase on cigarettes by 200%, state tax collections by 152%.
64. First to have a Special Assistant say on national TV “sometimes you had to HIT HIM ON THE HEAD with a 2 x 4 to get his attention”
65. First to have his official biographer state on national TV ‘After he was shot in 1981he GOT SLOWER AND SLOWER EACH YEAR. His speech got slower. He deliberated more and he hesitated more when he spoke. He lost his physical quickness and would not make decisions on the spot. It was a very, very slow and steady mental and physical decline”.
66. First to have a POPULARITY RATING OF ONLY 35% after his first two years in office.
67. First president to have been DIVORCED
68. First president to have the Geriatrics Department of a major
university study his behavior and conclude that AFTER THREE YEARS IN OFFICE HE HAD ALZHIMERS.
69. First to have shacked up with love of his life while wife was in hospital giving birth to first child

------------------------------------ THE TRUTH SHALL SET YOU FREE-------------------------------------------
Clarence Swinney—Burlington NC.—cwswinney@netzero.net

MT RUSHMORE THIS RECORD NOONAN

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But will they cross
Posted by: iatsebean on Dec 27, 2007 7:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's nice that the Democratic candidates still pay lipservice to the larger Unions, but when it comes right down to it, will any of them cross the picket line at the non-Union venue they've chosen for their convention in '08? Change, Mr. Obama? Would your dad have crossed Mr. Edwards? Let's see if they will truly support the voice of the people against the corporate interest.

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Unions support Hillary Clinton at own peril
Posted by: sausage on Dec 27, 2007 9:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If America's labor union movement has a death wish then endorsing Hillary Clinton is suicidal. After all, what do we know of her involvment in the formulation of employee rules during her stint as general counsel and board member for Wal Mart during husband Bill's governorship of Arkansas? We do, however, know Wal Mart's position on organized labor and, in a word, it is dismal(scroll down) .

Moreover since 1988 the Democratic National Party Platform makes no mention of the party's longstanding opposition to the Taft-Hartley Act and call for repeal. In fact since then working men and women are only mentioned only in the context of glittering generalities and vague promises of high wage jobs in new technologies and industries and, by 1996, full and unqualified support of NAFTA and GATT and globalization.

Interestingly unions noticed their biggest membership declines during Bill Clinton's ostensively "labor-friendly" administration. I might add a personal aside, I began my career with the United States Postal Service during Reagan's administration and,in retrospect, it was almost, dare I say it,a "fun" place to work. Labor-management relations deteriorated during Bush I's (mis)administration but they became absolutely deplorable during Bill Clinton's union-friendly administration. Coincidence? I think not. Stupidly my union, the National Association of Letter Carriers, has endorsed Mrs. Clinton's run for the White House. With friends like her they do not need any enemies.

The Democrats have forgotten that politics in a democracy is class warfare and it has been so since ancient Athens and the Roman Republic. But by 1988 they surrendered the field to the free marketeers, ignoring the simple truth that government's primary function is the proper ordering of the economy, as implied in the Preamble to The United States Constitution with the phrases to "...insure domestic Tranquility" and "...promote the general Welfare." (Notice that these two phrases frame "...provide for the common defence" and that tranquility and welfare are capitalized, indicating the Founding Fathers attached more significance to the economic function of a central government than to its war-making powers.)

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What took you so long, Paul?
Posted by: CharliePatton on Dec 27, 2007 1:47 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The U.S. labor movement isn't dying a natural death: corporations and politicians are helping."

No Kidding?

Gee, Paul, thanks for pointing out what's been painfully obvious for 27-years, at least.

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Pandora, the Ex Post Facto and Delayed Responses
Posted by: talkville on Dec 28, 2007 9:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
PATCO, anyone?

As with the Greenspan-engineered housing meltdown of late and other sordid events of recent history, it seems always the same story: After-the-fact and delayed response to actions and policies undertaken with little or no resistance many years before. Since the 70's, the Right has been on an obsessive and single-minded project of re-taking the "concessions" of Capital during the Roosevelt Era, and by the same strategies: PATCO, Savings & Loans, Airline Bailouts, Auto Bailouts, ENRON, NAFTA & CAFTA, Banking bailouts... . At first, EVERYBODY'S HAPPY and "the Economy" is booming; very few notice deeper significance to such things. Only after the fact do the REAL effects take hold and, 20 or 30 years later it's treated as some kind of "new" phenomenon when vast numbers of people are left holding the proverbial bag and the pirates are left with their 'champagne and caviar styles of living.

By now Labor is decimated and, once again, the Pirates win the "win-win" mind-game. Shysters love to make promises -- few question them when made; shysters also love not to keep promises and head out of Dodge quick and easy. The Right this time around has a 30 year+ head start with regard to working people.

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Great Article -- But Nothing New
Posted by: Philip Newton on Dec 30, 2007 9:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Industrial plutocracy has been waging war on unions since unions existed.

National Association of Manufacturers, US Chamber of Commerce, National Right To Work (for less) et al have an organized and relentless programme of union destruction.

I'm an SEIU member and just returned from an organizing campaign in Colorado.

Yes, unions are marching back, but we have a long way to go, starting with the de-programming of working people. Anti-union bile is everywhere in our culture, like a miasma. Destroying unions makes great businewss sense -- if one is a sociopathically greedy meat machine with no sense of social responsibility at all.

That is who opposes the labor movement.

It has always been war, but only one side has been fighting it for years.

It we wake up, we can't be stopped.

Grade: A

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All Unions?
Posted by: callejero on Dec 30, 2007 11:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article doesn't apply to police and teachers' unions--does it? These will be around for as long as the bureaucrats are spending the public's money and not their own.

For that reason, the two unions will not welcome anyone from outside their rank and file because outside this world, CEO's answer to a bigger rank and file (their stockholders) and are the ultimate tightwads--but, not, of course, when it comes to their own pay.

What is the F'en use? All we can do is what others before us have done--start all over and hope we get it right (apologies to Jefferson and Adams and the others who thought they got it right).

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Edwards can help revitalize the labor movement
Posted by: RightDemocrat on Dec 31, 2007 8:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
John Edwards is revitalizing the labor wing of the Democratic Party. With a fighting populist approach, Edwards can win over many working class-middle class voters concerned about their economic future. Nominating a candidate like Obama who has appeal primarily to the upscale "wine and cheese" crowd with vague promises of reform is no way to build a progressive-populist majority. Edwards has the potential to build a new Democratic majority that can fix health care, end our trade deficit and restore collective bargaining rights.

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