What is the objective of the strike? — Vera Mont
What are the employer's options? — Vera Mont
If the strike succeeds, what does the worker gain? — Vera Mont
If it fails, what does the worker lose? — Vera Mont
The worker's choice is purported to be between loyalties to union and family, but that is not the case in real life. — Vera Mont
What does this particular worker want? — Vera Mont
This is to the detriment of the strikers, whose families are similarly unstable, have needs, and so forth. It's not a neutral act of duty, it's a person actively sabotaging the efforts of strikers in the name of their family: Family over Union. — Moliere
Doesn't the union provide income during the strike? — Benkei
Fucking weasels in that trade union I say, that cannot then give assistance to member workers when they go on strike! Where the hell have gone the money that you have paid the trade union just for these kind of situations? Jesus, that's the 1.0 thing for a trade union to do.Here is the main problem and the uncertainty of the worker. What will happen if the strike doesn't succeed? Most important: who covers up the situation of his family during the strike? Because this issue can take months... — javi2541997
Avoid the closure of the colliery. Thus, they would keep their jobs. — javi2541997
I do not consider it as "option" but a duty. — javi2541997
If you were the worker, what would you want? — javi2541997
It is interesting that you all say this is not a realistic scenario. :lol:
To be honest, I still do not understand why you see it that way... — javi2541997
Because of the way you set it up, with no regard to the government's role, the employer's side of it, or the union's rationale for calling a strike. — Vera Mont
The employers have no duty to anyone, — Vera Mont
I mean, there is always one specific person who, for whatever reason, is in a worse position than the rest. — javi2541997
I didn't know a dilemma needed to be that realistic.. — javi2541997
Of course they [employers] have and a lot [of duty]. Starting with the entrepreneur who pays their income and ending up with the state when taxes are paid. — javi2541997
But there's no choice in the abstract. — Moliere
That's an assumption not always borne out by results. The strikers are not necessarily represented by the union leadership; they may be incorrect in their assessment of the situation; this particular worker may be aware that the strike is futile.If you're a worker then, like it or not, scabbing will hurt strikers.
That's an assumption not always borne out by results. The strikers are not necessarily represented by the union leadership; they may be incorrect in their assessment of the situation; this particular worker may be aware that the strike is futile.
If he makes his decision on nothing more than loyalty to the union, it's just another case of blind obedience, not a moral or ethical one. — Vera Mont
Is there a possibility for the worker to make decisions individually?
When does scabbing not hurt strikers? — Moliere
if you help the boss break the strike then you're putting your family ahead of the other families that are also risking themselves. That's the choice being made. — Moliere
That, too, was one of my questions: Duty to the union, or obedience to the leadership? I have been a staunch trade unionist - even to refusing to cross a picket line as a client, when I had not been informed of the issue in contention. In fact, I voted for the miner in the OP to join the strike....duty to union, outside of union families, is often seen as a naive position. — Moliere
This is why I wanted to know if there is a possibility for a worker to disengage from this structure. When I read papers and news related to this issue, I figured out that a "scab" is badly seen among workers and most of them end up disowned. Yet, I was curious to understand the purposes of a scab and then some delicate situations like my OP could exist. Even, the trade unions can act aggressively towards the workers and threaten them. Acting like a gang, as you explained. — javi2541997
As presented in the example, the call to strike seems irrational. — Vera Mont
There are a lot of evidences which prove that trade unions act as a mafia group. — javi2541997
The only individualistic move that's called scabbing is continuing to work during a strike. Sometimes scabs are bussed in - hired from outside the union - to break a strike. Sometimes police or mercenaries are employed to break a strike.If you want to make an individualistic move, they quickly will call you scab. — javi2541997
Managements rarely see it that way; rarely show reciprocal loyalty to the employees. It usually is very much an adversarial situation. Bosses like to portray themselves as "job creators", while, in fact, they give the least remuneration they possible can in return for the most profit they can squeeze out of the workers and very often put workers at unnecessary risk to cut corners.Your group is the whole company you are working in, and mainly the owner and the management. — Alkis Piskas
You owe them a fair day's work for a fair day's pay - nothing more.So, you owe them more than you owe to your colleagues and the syndicate. — Alkis Piskas
The example I used the strike was for equal pay for women. They didn't win in the first strike, but they got some victories, and then some odd 15 years later the original demand was met with a longer strike. — Moliere
I've been in unions at various points in their life-cycle, including an attempt to form a brand new one. That was defeated, and two years later, the same workers opted to join one of big, powerful unions, in which they would be an insignificant cog. Not a great outcome, but a rational choice that resulted in better pay for my ex-colleagues. By then, I was working elsewhere as a member of one of the big, powerful unions - which served us very well, as it happens, and deserved our support. — Vera Mont
The OP example was questionable, so I questioned it. Is that not why we're here? — Vera Mont
Being an organizer is a stressful, thankless job where everyone blames you for everything and most of what you do is run around putting out fires for less than the members you service make — Moliere
I believe this is quite a biased view, and not a very reasonable one either, Vera Mont. Management works for the interests of their company. As with the blue-collar workers --I can't differentiate them as "employees", because managment personnel is among them too :smile:-- and it is the company that pays them too, so it's only logical that they are loyal to it. They have no obligation to be loyal to the blue-collars, but only to be fair, have good relations with them, and all that. Besides, the same applies to the blue-collars.Managements rarely see it that way; rarely show reciprocal loyalty to the employees. It usually is very much an adversarial situation. — Vera Mont
Right.You owe them a fair day's work for a fair day's pay - nothing more. — Vera Mont
Which means shareholders, waiting for their quarterly dividend and looking for the value of their stock to rise.Management works for the interests of their company. — Alkis Piskas
As with the blue-collar workers --I can't differentiate them as "employees", because managment personnel is among them too — Alkis Piskas
The ratio of CEO-to-typical-worker pay soared to 399-to-1 under EPI’s realized measure of CEO pay, the highest ratio on record, up from 366-to-1 in 2020 and a massive increase from 59-to-1 in 1989.
I believe this is quite a biased view, — Alkis Piskas
The Abandonment of Small Cities in the Rust Belt
Oct. 10, 2019
Things began to change for these communities in the 1980s, when American corporations began to outsource production and re-engineer their organizations to adapt to globalization.
As it also happens, one big company contracted a friend of mine some years ago. Two months later, his agent reported that they still had not received $#1. My friend packed up and left; the agency was eventually able to beat his fee and their percentage out of the company. It sometimes happens that they never pay up.Millions of Americans struggle to get by on low wages, often without any benefits such as paid sick leave, a pension, or even health insurance. Their difficult lives are made immeasurably harder when they do the work they have been hired to do, but their employers refuse to pay, pay for some hours but not others, or fail to pay overtime premiums when employees’ hours exceed 40 in a week.
Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors
Please share. — Vera Mont
The co-workers are just colleagues in an industrial activity and we only share time and space. — javi2541997
I know something about the history of trade union movements and labour parties. The present is pretty dim, especially in the US, but other countries, too, where a succession of governments have been systematically kneecapping unions.
But what of their future? Given the state of automation and collar-bleaching... I wonder. Teachers, librarians, nurses, yes. Who else is, or can be organized into, a progressive political force? — Vera Mont
Two important examples: — javi2541997
There are a lot of evidences which prove that trade unions act as a mafia group. — javi2541997
When people talk about the dimness of labor — Moliere
Someday we'll find it, https://www.zinnedproject.org/materials/the-firWhat worked then is what would work now, if people decided to stop living in their little family-bubble.
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