Originally posted by kentonio
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Scott Walker's crusade continues
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Its better to have an uninformed electorate that gets surprised with their layoffs."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
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Originally posted by Ogie Oglethorpe View PostI am struggling to think of time when thousands of tea partiers forcibly broke into the governmental buildings as was the case in Madison Mar 2011 or anything resembling the 6800+ occupy arrests to date."I hope I get to punch you in the face one day" - MRT144, Imran Siddiqui
'I'm fairly certain that a ban on me punching you in the face is not a "right" worth respecting." - loinburger
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Originally posted by kentonio View PostIt gets tricky to remember which handfull of pub policies you don't support man. Tricky.. Well apart from the weed thing obviously.John Brown did nothing wrong.
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Originally posted by Felch View PostI'm not a doctrinaire conservative, so comparing me to them just shows how out of touch you are.I don't care what you are - you're irrelevant. This is a national issue, e.g. California's Proposition 32 and about 15 other states, IIRC, and you're parroting the same crocodile tear concern for worker's rights as the doctrinaire economic conservatives who are behind this legislative movement. Since you're the one posting the position, you're the proxy for the people who actually count.
Republicans already pull in a decent percentage of the union vote - somewhere between a third and two fifths depending on the election. Which tells me that they seem to have plenty of positions the working man is comfortable with.
Maybe if unions bosses weren't just Democratic party stooges, they'd have an easier time convincing people to contribute without relying on coercion.
And people have no right to take things that don't belong to them.
Or they can go without a job and just lose their homes and starve. You really are a compassionate man, aren't you?If they decide "oh, I'd rather lose my home and starve than take that one specific job because I might not like them contributing some of my dues to a PAC which might support a candidate I don't like, and I have no intention of looking for or taking any other job" then they probably should starve.
Businesses fail all the time. Economic necessity is a real thing, and pretending like it doesn't exist just shows how shallow your thinking is.
If unions are so great, why do they need to coerce people to pay them?
you're on the side of the thugs and racketeers.When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."
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Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat View PostAwww, weren't you whining about ad hominems a few posts ago?I don't care what you are - you're irrelevant. This is a national issue, e.g. California's Proposition 32 and about 15 other states, IIRC, and you're parroting the same crocodile tear concern for worker's rights as the doctrinaire economic conservatives who are behind this legislative movement. Since you're the one posting the position, you're the proxy for the people who actually count.
Let's put it this way. Obama (now) supports gay rights. MrFun supports gay rights. Obama has killed Americans with drone strikes without regard to their Constitutional right to due process. Does that mean that MrFun necessarily supports killing Americans without due process? Maybe he does, maybe he doesn't. But lumping people together because they agree on one issue is superficial, and shows just how weak your arguments are.
And if you look deeper at the splits, the differences are generally on things like gun rights and social conservative issues unrelated to employment and labor policy.
There's no coercion. The dues-paying worker gets the benefits under the CBA - and if he doesn't like that, he can go elsewhere, just like the non-union worker who doesn't like the terms of his employment. Dues start when the CBA benefit starts, and they stop when the CBA benefit stops. It's simply a payment to a legally separate entity for services rendered - the benefits of the CBA.
Nice strawman, They must have 'em on clearance where you are.If they decide "oh, I'd rather lose my home and starve than take that one specific job because I might not like them contributing some of my dues to a PAC which might support a candidate I don't like, and I have no intention of looking for or taking any other job" then they probably should starve.
Ah, more strawmen and ad hominems. Businesses fail all the time? You mean like Enron, Worldcom and Adelphia? Wanna 'splain how economic necessity factored in there?
They don't. I've never paid a dime in union dues in my life. If I wanted a union job, I'd go get one. It's not like all workers have to pay dues to some union whether they have representation or not.
In the end, all I want is freedom, and all you want is control. I want people to be free in their political associations, and you want them to be forced into supporting candidates they don't agree with. Show me why freedom is wrong, or go back to whatever rock you've been hiding under all these years.John Brown did nothing wrong.
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Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat View PostI think there are probably a few Cromwellian purists who would love to see unions dead as a matter or their own personal orgasmic joy. Bachmann would be one of those, so would Palin - the dimmest bulbs on the right-wing Christmas tree. I think the more Nixonian types would rather see crippled, ineffective unions instead of dead unions, because those would be more persuasive to the serfs how unions are ineffective at advancing their interests.
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Originally posted by Felch View PostAbsolutely none of this makes sense. When did it become an ad hominem to point out that you're out of touch in lumping me in with people I oppose?
If I'm irrelevant, why are you wasting all this time trying to prove me wrong?
How does supporting a position make me a proxy for other supporters?
But lumping people together because they agree on one issue is superficial, and shows just how weak your arguments are.If you're promoting the same argument (every other right to work shill is parroting the same "worker's freedom" nonsense), you'll get painted by the same brush. Want to be treated differently? Advance a novel argument.
Point being that the workers don't support the candidates. I'm a blue dog Democrat myself, and I hate the gun grabbing branch of my party.
If there's no coercion then there's no need to fear a right to work law.
So it's okay to force people to support candidates they don't like? And if they don't like it then they should starve? You really are a friend of the working man.
Wanna explain what any of those have to do with the right to work issue? Your eagerness to change the subject shows me that you know you're wrong. It's evidence of a guilty conscience.
Why don't you contribute to their PACs? Put your money where your mouth is, and let other people do the same.
In the end, all I want is freedom, and all you want is control. I want people to be free in their political associations, and you want them to be forced into supporting candidates they don't agree with. Show me why freedom is wrong, or go back to whatever rock you've been hiding under all these years.Nobody's forced - it's not like the workers can't quit and go elsewhere or vote to decertify.
When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."
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Originally posted by Felch View PostIf they're the good guys, then they have nothing to fear from right to work laws.
You're just not being honest enough to admit it.Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Originally posted by Felch View PostDemocrats consistently get 60% of the union vote. Do you think they only get 60% of the union cash?Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Originally posted by Dinner View PostHow wrong can someone be? When given a chance to free ride loads of people will free ride. The "agency fee" (which is about $25 per month in most cases but it does vary) is what non members pay to the union because the union negotiated the labor contract under which those non-members work. They benefit in the form of higher wages, better benefits, and better working conditions but without the agency fee those people wouldn't have to pay for those things. Allowing more free riders will never improve a system and you know it just like you know this is all about defunding unions in a partisan attempt to harm the Democratic Party.
You're just not being honest enough to admit it.John Brown did nothing wrong.
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Originally posted by Dinner View PostYour posts are so full of fail. Members have been able to opt out of political contributions for decades. All they have to do is fill out one 3"x5" card which is even pre-printed for them. Are you deliberately lying or just this ignorant?
EDIT: I am ignorant. I've never held a union job, and I had no idea that they could opt out of political contributions so easily.John Brown did nothing wrong.
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