My grandfather was a union laborer who felt his union stood up for him.
My dad was a teacher (when teachers made very little) who became a negotiator for the treacher's union, and he says it has gone way to far.
My BIL is a union grocery worker who pays plenty of dues and can't get a return call from his union. Sometimes he works 21 days without a day off, gets grief for taking a lunch break (he's a diabetic), so his union is pretty useless.
That being said, I have no problem with unions for private sector employees. I can choose not to buy products if the price is too high.
However, unions for professions funded by taxpayers have been a recipe for fiscal disaster in NJ. The only party who has no say in the negotiations here in NJ is the taxpayer. The Governor is (or was) in bed (literally) with the state employees union. The unions give HUGE bucks to political campaigns. The unions make their demands publicly, make their deals privately, the politicians line their pockets and the taxpayers get screwed.
When we vote down another outrageous school budget here, the school board takes off a couple of dollars and submits it to the state department of ed who "passes" it. I have no idea why we waste money (more taxpayer dollars) to vote on school budgets.
Those we know who are state workers (several friends and family) have truly been brainwashed by their union. They seriously believe that everyone in the private sector makes high six figures, gets months of vacation time, fully paid health benefits, pensions, flexible hours, etc etc etc. They claim they are paid so little that they must have guaranteed pensions and healthy care for life (at taxpayer expense). In reality, state employees in NJ are in many cases paid more than private sector workers. When the bennies are factored in, the state workers are living large. And now they are whining because the Governor has decided to make them work the day after Thanksgiving. Boo hoo hoo.
My brother works for a state agency (part of the handicapped program). In the 20 years he has been there, he has been harrassed and threatened by a co-worker, seen a supervisor held at knifepoint by another worker and watched others eat snacks for a living. None of those people have been fired yet, thanks to the union.
When NJ (already in dire fiscal condition) has to come up with more billions for public employee pensions and health care next year, taxpayers may finally revolt.