[identity profile] futurebird.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] talkpolitics
Will the protests further stoke the resentment many harbor for public worker's unions? Or will the backlash in reaction to Republican attempts to throttle organized labor be the bigger impact of these events? What about people like me, people who have criticisms of some aspects of public unions but generally support the idea that public workers should have decent wages and pensions? (Really all people should have the opportunity to work for those things.) Are these events making "nuanced" positions invisible?

I mean... I'm ticked off enough to start sticking SOLIDARITY stickers all over my face. (Will that help?) yet, I don't feel this accurately represents my views on the essential, yet easily corruptible role of unions in this country. *sigh*

(no subject)

Date: 24/2/11 08:23 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fleaplus.livejournal.com
> If Wisconsin doesn't like unions so much, why don't they just become a right-to-work state and depower them that way? Under right-to-work, unions become pointless.

Actually, since that would be a non-budget bill, I wonder why the Republicans don't end up just passing something like that while the Democrats are out of the state.

(no subject)

Date: 24/2/11 09:22 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] farchivist.livejournal.com
My guess: This would depower the unions in the manufacturing sectors of the Wisconsin economy, which would anger the Republican workers who are located in those private unions. The food processing industry is heavy there; the unions in that business are pretty powerful and would take ill to a right-to-work law.

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