JeepinEd
Senior member
- Dec 12, 2005
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Originally posted by: Craig234
Originally posted by: eskimospy
It never ceases to amaze me that some people when confronted with corporations that bargain hard say "well that's capitalism, don't like it? Too bad.", but when confronted with unions that do the same compare them to say... the mob.
As usual, Eskimo is right; there's some bizarre psychology that makes working-class people turn on each other a lot more than they unite against their 'real enemy'.
Show them a billionare exploiting thousands of people for big bucks, and they praise and defend him, but show them a person they think is getting a few government dollars or a few dollars higher wages as a union member and they lose their minds in hate for the person.
Makes it awfully easy for the propagandists. Any time there are rumblings against the wealthy, just toss out some story about welfrare fraud, and they're back to that.
The majority of companies in the US are not owned by billionaires. They are owned by normal people who put everything they own on the line in order to make a better living for themselves.
You say you smell ideology, well I wouldn't say ideology as much as life experience.
I have seen a small business owner literally cry when his business became unionized. Within two years, the union basically forced him to close the business. The union bosses convince the employees that the company is making incredible profits and they should be getting more money (which equals more money to the union bosses). In reality most businesses operate on small profit margins. When the unions force the company to increase wages and benefits through the treat of strikes, it makes running the business a losing proposition.