Wadecool
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2011
- Messages
- 4,160
There are many states (like the one that I work in) that are not OSHA states. In these states many workers are exempt from OSHA regulations unless they are specifically adopted by the state. Even where OSHA regulates workplace safety, they do a very poor job of doing so and most of what they do is reactionary, as in after a death or serious injury has occurred. The incidence of injury/deaths in union workplaces is significantly lower than in non-union workplaces. Also, it is not the unions fault that jobs have moved out of our country. That lies with these supposed "fair trade" agreements which do not account for deplorable wages and working conditions elsewhere coupled with corparate greed which take advantage of them. Surely you dont think we should have 7 year olds working in factories for pennies a day so we can compete with other countries (or maybe you do).
The attitudes expressed in this thread are some of the biggest reasons that
unions are necessary. A complete lack of respect for the working men and
woman of this country. This idea that if they don't like it they should take the
steps to get a better job misses the point. Someone has to do the job and
they deserve a decent wage for doing it. noone is saying that a laborer
should make the same as a CEO. Jobs which require more skill, education,
training or involve more risk should pay more. That doesn't mean the growing
gap between the top earners and the bottom earners isn't a huge
problem.
Personally, as someone who has worked in factories that are union as well as non-union, its not a lack of respect for hard working folks at all. I do, however have a complete lack of respect for unions that do nothing more than collect dues to pass up to their fat cat bosses and give back little in return. In a PP I mentioned a BIL who works at a UAW Ford plant in Louisville making $100,000 driving a forklift. Even he can't believe he gets that much to move pallets. Unions did a lot for workers in the early to mid 20th century, especially for coal workers here in KY, but their time is past. Now, they are hanging on for dear life, but the writing is on the wall.

