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  • Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
    Listen to yourself: some unions are corrupt, therefore all unions suck.


    Ah, the philosopher engages in a classic logical fallacy. Why am I not suprised?! He thinks that if I say some unions are corrupt, then I mean all unions suck. Isn't that like extrapolating the general from the specific or something? You're the philosopher, you should know what logical fallacy you are committing here.

    And putting words in someone else's mouth (ie, you think all unions are bad and evil and should be abolished). Isn't that another logical fallacy?

    Man, you must be a piss poor philosophy teacher with a track record for logical fallacies like this!


    Go back and read your own posts. You acknowledged the possibility that some unions may be OK and then went on to the typical one sided railing against the institution as stealing from workers blah blah blah blah. In short, all the usual misinformed tripe that substitutes for reasoning and evidence among too many of those on the political right.

    What is someone supposed to think? That deep down you have a fair minded, balanced opinion about unions? Give me a break...

    Call me what you like, but I'd never in a million years hire you as a lawyer, nor allow you anywhere near legislation.
    Only feebs vote.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Kucinich


      The unions only care about their wages, even if it bankrupts the state.
      How many times would I need to post my points again before you reconsider that?
      The genesis of the "evil Finn" concept- Evil, evil Finland

      Comment


      • Agathon's losing his touch. His posts used to at least have a veneer of logic.

        Comment


        • Go back and read your own posts.


          Maybe you should.

          You acknowledged the possibility that some unions may be OK and then went on to the typical one sided railing against the institution as stealing from workers blah blah blah blah. In short, all the usual misinformed tripe that substitutes for reasoning and evidence among too many of those on the political right.


          Oh wait... so I said that some unions are good and then said there are ones that aren't. There are some out there that steal from pensions because I'VE DEALT WITH THEM IN MY JOB! So misinformed! I guess all that pension and medical plan money they stole wasn't actually real right?

          So once again, taking me saying some unions are bad, you think equals me saying all unions are bad.

          Continue on this logical fallacy, the hole you are digging shows the lack of your logical training... I hope you don't pretend to teach the logic you do not have.
          “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
          - John 13:34-35 (NRSV)

          Comment


          • Your attitude in subsequent posts reveals all that anyone would want to know. A typical right wing union bash without any evidence that you actually have any experience with what most unions do for their members.

            Everyone else in the thread has acknowledged the truth, which is that unions are a less than perfect solutions to problems that our society faces. The same goes for corporations and state agencies. The fact that they are less than perfect is a result of inevitable compromises that we have to make, given the nature of people and organizations.

            But why bother dealing with the messy reality when you can post pictures of Ronald Reagan accompanied by hackneyed sloganeering?
            Only feebs vote.

            Comment


            • Yes what I'm talking about has no evidence at all . How many times much I reiterate that I'm talking about my personal experiences with these corrupt unions. To speak of unions like they are God's gift to works (ie, like you) is totally false seeing the corrupt stuff that I has WITNESSED! No where did I say that unions were evil, but you want to reaaaaly pin it on me because you have no argument. We can start a few posts up where I asked what about those unions which are corrupt (you deny they exist?) and you went into a diatribe about ALL unions. Specific to the general... and you keep on going.

              Do you just like getting owned?
              Last edited by Imran Siddiqui; July 8, 2004, 15:10.
              “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
              - John 13:34-35 (NRSV)

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Kucinich
                Agathon's losing his touch. His posts used to at least have a veneer of logic.
                If by logic, you mean hate, stereotyping and slander then yes.

                Whoops, I mean it's still the same.
                "Just puttin on the foil" - Jeff Hanson

                “In a democracy, I realize you don’t need to talk to the top leader to know how the country feels. When I go to a dictatorship, I only have to talk to one person and that’s the dictator, because he speaks for all the people.” - Jimmy Carter

                Comment


                • As I said, I read your posts. Your attitude is quite plain, as is that of your little friends.

                  If you want to come up with some serious ideas, go ahead.
                  Only feebs vote.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Lazarus and the Gimp
                    Whether it's in the interests of the employer is highly debateable, and a lot of employers would disagree.
                    Depends on the type of skill. If you had a software system that was unique, or almost unique, to one company, then it would certainly be in the company's interest to provide training. If the software were commonly used (e.g., any standard Microsoft application), then the company would have much less incntive to train, since the employee could take the learned skills elsewhere.

                    Originally posted by Lazarus and the Gimp
                    No they weren't.
                    Since I posted some data on the US, I presume this comment refers to the UK. Data would be more convincing than assertion, though I realize that not everyone has data at their fingertips.

                    Originally posted by Lazarus and the Gimp
                    Incidentally, how were better working conditions due to rising worker incomes? Am I missing something?
                    Economic studies have found that safety, leisure, and environmental protection are "normal" goods. I.e., as people's incomes increase they demand more of these, all else equal. For example, the more a worker earns, the more he or she stands to lose from an accident, hence the greater demand for safety. Therefore, as workers incomes increase, we would expect to see lower accident rates, shorter hours, and better environmental protection.
                    Old posters never die.
                    They j.u.s.t..f..a..d..e...a...w...a...y....

                    Comment


                    • A story from Israel; I am left scratching my head at this:

                      A tape surfaced that showed a govt. minister plotting to dig up mud against another minister with a PI that worked with the electrical company union. that's because Minister B attacked the free electricity rights the workers were getting. All of that happened 2 years ago, when both the ministers were simple members of parliament, from the same party.

                      Now, minister A has been moving to privatization of electricity, as the minister of infrastructure. The union fiercly opposes this ( and so do I ). So the PI, supposedly because of the unions, let out the tape of this, supposedly to take out minister A.

                      What do you people think about this?
                      urgh.NSFW

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Adam Smith
                        Economic studies have found that safety, leisure, and environmental protection are "normal" goods. I.e., as people's incomes increase they demand more of these, all else equal. For example, the more a worker earns, the more he or she stands to lose from an accident, hence the greater demand for safety. Therefore, as workers incomes increase, we would expect to see lower accident rates, shorter hours, and better environmental protection.
                        In an industrial economy, were labor was very interchangeable, why would wages rise (I assume rising above the rate of inflation, not just rising) without any pressure?
                        If you don't like reality, change it! me
                        "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
                        "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
                        "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Azazel
                          A story from Israel; I am left scratching my head at this:

                          A tape surfaced that showed a govt. minister plotting to dig up mud against another minister with a PI that worked with the electrical company union. that's because Minister B attacked the free electricity rights the workers were getting. All of that happened 2 years ago, when both the ministers were simple members of parliament, from the same party.

                          Now, minister A has been moving to privatization of electricity, as the minister of infrastructure. The union fiercly opposes this ( and so do I ). So the PI, supposedly because of the unions, let out the tape of this, supposedly to take out minister A.

                          What do you people think about this?
                          privatizaion of electricity is bad and will lead to huge price hikes. so good thing you're against. EU directive calls for opening up the electricity market. there are ways around it. hopefully we'll manage to avoid it.

                          if you want an example of why pirvatization is bad look at california.

                          incidently mass transport must remain public, if you want an example of why look at the UK

                          Comment


                          • or at greece for the 3 years it privatized busses

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by paiktis22

                              if you want an example of why pirvatization is bad look at california.
                              Actually California didn't build powerplants for 10 years. If you look at Texas, we use the most energy of any state, have low prices, the companies that allegedly gouged California are all based here,etc.

                              Comment


                              • Ozzie, you didn't read my post - they (managment) can't do it that way. The Union will always get pay at least as high as the first offer. Management cannot offer less during negotiations, that would be considered bad faith negotiating/targeting union members (one or both) and is a violation of labor law, and should be enforced by the NLRB (National Labor Relations Board). Unfortunately it has become a rubber stamp for management under the Bush administration. Instead today they just fire the pro-union workers (who try to organize - look at Walmart and some hospitals), or stage a lockout (union refuses a new last-offer contract, continues to work under the old with no strike thread) and break the union, hiring all non-union "replacement" workers.

                                Imran, workers can already negotiate on their own, it's called getting promoted into management, or productivity bonuses. However, what often happens when the company doesn't bother with hard metrics is that syncophants instead get the promotions and bonuses while hard workers get squat. Management can easily set up those programs BEFORE they get the union, treating workers fairly by verifiable metrics. When they do, funny thing, the workers usually don't vote for a union. Look at Ben and Gerry's Ice Cream. We have a friend in GE's sale force, which has the same thing (and no union). Most companies don't bother, and when the rest of the people get pissed over unfair treatment or favoritism, they act shocked when a union gets elected.

                                Also look at what various racial and sex, especially the latter, discrimination suits have revealed reference when workers "negotiate their own salary", i.e. salaried positions. People routinely offer higher salaries to those of the same sex/race. As a previous poster commented, the problem is asymetric information.

                                Imran, since your posts deal with 90% plus with what's wrong with unions, and your examples are almost all about corrupt and/or bad union practices, it is reasonable for Agathon to interpt you as anti-union. Try googling recent coal field related deaths in Appalachia and tell me that we don't need unions. The Federal mine safety people have neither enough inspectors and the upper levels of management are mostly appointed from the industry. We had the case of one older manager try to fight a new rule that would kill more miners, as written by the coal company lobbyists and implemented by Bush adminstration. He was demoted/hastled till he left. Deaths per worker are up, and we've gotten largely unpunished fraud on coal dust sampling, etc. Which evil is worse? Your corrupt unions, or the dead miners? While I realize that you may argue that is not the choice you are implying, that is what your scenario boils down to. You are talking pro-management versus simply cleaning up the unions, which is not so easily done but possible via electing a new union. 50% per cent of the workers within it's either 60 or 90 days of a new contract. If the union is that bad, that is all it takes.

                                Adam, same thing for you. Coal field deaths are up, and OSHA has been badly damaged by this adminstration. We are having increasing cases of toxic exposure (look at reports on migrant farm workers for one area that I have read about). While I only have those two cases, they in themselves are pretty potent example of why your premise on safety, etc. has some flaws. Get me a model that includes the coal field deaths. Hint, hint and for Whoha to - maybe the government has some primary function concerning safety, and that unions may indeed provide a buffer enhancing that issue.

                                Go back to the administration of Teddy Roosevelt. Go read Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, an expose on the meat packing industry of the time, which you could make some minor change's to and apply it to today's chicken packing industry - oops, there my third example on repetive motion injuries. Wait, the new rules on those injuries, a DECADE in the making, were gutted by the Bush adminstration with the help of my representative Ann Northup! Wait, they don't have union! Wait, they have minimal regulations in other areas too! And we are getting increasing cases of listeria poisoning and have streams and rivers that are unsafe for human CONTACT (not just drinking) in NW Arkansas (FYI that was by Clinton/Tyson, it's not just Bush). And because we are using Cipro (an antibiotic) to help produce cheap chickens in a factory farm type situation, children are now going deaf due to untreatable ear infections (Cipro was an antibiotic of choice for those back in the 90's, and was the last of the easy to administer/low side effect ones/inexpensive ones for children). That is a free market at work. Tell the kids who have lost their hearing how it helps them.

                                Lastly, on the deregulation of electricity. Adam Smith, go ahead and rebut this. A purely free market solution with minimal, actually very close to no regulation, led to rampant corruption. You have traders on the energy exchanges tapes bragging about how they'd get the money from grandmother's as they shut down plants to spike the charges - I've heard the actual conversation. Unfettered capitalism results in monopolistic behavior and, due to the access of money to politics, semi-free market laws that result in the protection of markets via a corporate state or cartels and monoplies. So unregulated free markets are a fantasy, per se, something that typically exists for a transient time period unless there is government regulation preventing monopolistic and other similiar behavior (look at the price-fixing worldwide on vitamin additives). Like most real world things, it is a constant balance, and requires fiddling and fine-tuning to keep it working. Extremist free marketers produce the California energy fiasco - which by any account was an UNREGULATED free market (after all, it is the energy producer's choice if he shuts down his plant to create a shortage - right?). Give the Unions too much power and you end up like Great Britian between WW2 and Thatcher as the Unions help freeze the economy (or look at France right now). However, looking at the historical record - I think if I have to go to either extreme, I'll choose unions.edited for spelling
                                Last edited by Mr. Harley; July 8, 2004, 19:04.
                                The worst form of insubordination is being right - Keith D., marine veteran. A dictator will starve to the last civilian - self-quoted
                                And on the eigth day, God realized it was Monday, and created caffeine. And behold, it was very good. - self-quoted
                                Klaatu: I'm impatient with stupidity. My people have learned to live without it.
                                Mr. Harley: I'm afraid my people haven't. I'm very sorry… I wish it were otherwise.

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