Doesn't the union provide income during the strike? — Benkei
is mostly pretence.nicely constructed dilemma involving real choices which workers face — BC
The United States is not the best example of how unionisation works. — Banno
The
nicely constructed dilemma involving real choices which workers face
— BC
is mostly pretence. — Banno
, so they can afford to pay the guys who bring up the coal. They can also afford to re-employ* the same people in their next venture.A whopping $35 million. That's what the highest paid mining company CEO earned in 2021, according to data collected by Costmine Intelligence, part of The Northern Miner Group.
Workers do face difficult decisions in supporting a union drive, becoming active in the union, and in striking, especially when the employer is hostile. The risks are not a pretense. Strikes do not always succeed, and a failed strike can leave the union members broke and out in the cold. — BC
What's your point? Seems like more thinly veiled anti-union stuff to me. — Mikie
is mostly pretence. — Banno
Workers do face difficult decisions in supporting a union drive, becoming active in the union, and in striking, especially when the employer is hostile. The risks are not a pretense. Strikes do not always succeed, and a failed strike can leave the union members broke and out in the cold. — BC
You may have a family. But do you think that the other strikers don't? — Moliere
Why can't the wife work? — RogueAI
Can the guy on strike get a temporary job outside the field he's in? — RogueAI
I think what is key in this dilemma is who the worker owes more loyalty: his family or the miner's trade union (another kind of family) — javi2541997
Which country did you have in mind as a good example? — BC
Sure, that wasn't the pretence to which I was referring - that was rather the notion that moral dilemmas of this sort lead to a clearer picture of such situations, for the sort of reasons I gave. They are intended to be intractable, and the various proponents will go out of their way to reinforce this intractability. A few more examples of this have already emerged in this thread. It would be much better to look at historical cases, the miners and Thatcher, perhaps.Workers do face difficult decisions in supporting a union drive — BC
Yep. The pretence here is that this is an attempt to make an impossibly intractable situation appear realistic.Pretence means: an attempt to make something that is not the case appear true. — javi2541997
Why can't the wife work?
— RogueAI
She can work, but she is unemployed. — javi2541997
You are not going to get there, because you can always add something that renders the individual choice void.My point was to know if "individual" choices in edge circumstances are or not plausible... — javi2541997
Yep. The pretence here is that this is an attempt to make an impossibly intractable situation appear realistic. — Banno
I do not understand why you don't see this as realistic. — javi2541997
But keep in mind that the worker of the example has problems in his family: the wife is already unemployed, one kid is sick and the other goes to college. Maybe the rest of the workers are covered up thanks to the incomes of their respective families... — javi2541997
It would be much better to look at historical cases, the miners and Thatcher, perhaps. — Banno
Your job involves working at a colliery. The government is about to elaborate a new law reform that the main objective is to reduce pollution and develop an eco-friendly system.
Employment at collieries is at its risk. The leader of the miner's trade union prepares a big strike in your town. — javi2541997
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