Warren Dew wrote:JimC wrote:Warren Dew wrote:JimC wrote:Without unions, things would be very unbalanced indeed. The power of capital, and its understandable desire to drive wages and conditions as low as possible, means that individual workers have little chance to gain a fair share if they act alone.
This must be why software engineers, who don't have unions, earn only minimum wage, rather than as much or more than unionized workers.
Oh wait, they make about the same as unionized auto workers! Guess you're mistaken.
Well, there is the factor of whether you have skills which are in demand, I agree. I didn't mean to imply the the degree of unionisation was the sole determinant of wage outcomes; other factors clearly operate.
What I am saying, however, that unions in general are vital to social justice in an industrial state, since they are often the sole means that workers have to protect them from the rapacious side of large scale capitalism.
Your two paragraphs contradict each other. If unions were the "sole means" workers had to protect themselves, and capitalism was "rapacious", then software engineers would be making minimum wage.
The key words in Jim C's statement are "social justice." This is a Progressive code-word for forcible redistribution of wealth from the rich to the poor. It's based on the premise that a society is not just when economic inequality between the poorest and the wealthiest exists. This Progressive/Socialist concept does not care to examine the causes of income inequality, rather it presumes that the amount of wealth in an economy is a fixed number, and that no person can have more wealth unless other persons have less wealth. It's a zero-sum fallacy that is propounded as a part of the general Marxist/Socialist plan to foment class warfare by pointing to inequities and suggesting that the cause of the inequity is the "rapacious side of large scale capitalism," when in fact capitalism itself is not generally responsible for the inequities.
For the most part, economic inequity in a capitalist society is a function of human nature and may be exacerbated by pre-existing class structures that use the force of law to deny certain classes or groups opportunity to advance themselves economically. This system of legally-enforced class discrimination, which includes forms such as feudalism and hereditary aristocracy and monarchy, was what Marx and the other socialists thought they were facing when the notions they propounded came to the fore. Marxism was a solution to a genuine problem of the time. Not a good solution, but one that he felt was the only way to break the aristocracy and its class repression. Russia faced the same problem under the Tsars, and Marx's solution seemed the most expedient way to redistribute the wealth of the monarchs and landed gentry to the bulk of the people, given the fact that military repression of the lower classes was a commonplace method of preserving the power structure.
But the problem with socialism today is that it's an ideology in search of an enemy. Except in rare cases, hereditary aristocracy and monarchy do not have the power to legally or economically suppress the working classes, and so Marxism turns its attention to capitalistic economic inequality instead, because the lure of power is as strong for the Marxist elite as it is for a monarch.
But capitalism, sans legalized class repression such as that seen even today in India, with its caste system that legally prohibits certain classes from economic advancement by prohibiting them from engaging in certain occupations, creates economic inequality in an entirely different way and for entirely different reasons.
In a free market capitalist society, there are no legal barriers to the individual, as a member of some class or other, stepping out of that class and improving his economic condition through hard work and innovation. In fact, capitalism welcomes new ideas and hard work, and for every good, marketable idea with profit potential there is investment capital seeking a place to invest so it can earn a return on that investment. What is required to achieve economic mobility is a marketable idea and the personal drive to bring it to market. When someone does this, they prosper under capitalism, and so does society. History is replete with examples of individuals who have created a better mousetrap and prospered, from Thomas Edison to Henry Ford to Bill Gates. No one was repressed or enslaved to their service by a monarch. And while it is true that having capital makes it much easier to generate more capital, that does not mean that it is fundamentally unfair or unjust that some people have capital and others don't.
That's a function of complicated social, economic and personal factors that are primarily the responsibility of the individual to resolve.
The Progressive/Socialist term "social justice" means little more than "They have wealth, and I don't, and that's unjust." Because it's a deliberately obscure and imprecise term, it's nothing more than propaganda. It's an attempt to breed social unrest by convincing the poor that their plight is not their fault, but instead its the fault of the wealthy for having "all the wealth," as if wealth were a finite thing. Most important is the propagandistic argument that the poor are not poor because of their natural limitations or unwillingness to either work hard or accept risk, but rather they are only poor because the rich have stolen all the wealth are are hoarding it under their mattresses, and are thereby denying everyone else any economic or social justice.
This class-based propaganda is classic Marxist rhetoric. It sounds good to the underprivileged, but it deliberately refuses to examine why it is that the wealthy have wealth, how they acquired it, and what they ACTUALLY do with it. And that's where the "social justice" propaganda fails. When the facts are delivered, the social justice argument, along with Marxism, fall apart because they are concocted from a tissue of deliberate, carefully calculated lies that pander to the ignorance of the "disadvantaged" as part of a cynical ploy on the part of the Marxist elite to take power and control over the entire economy, and replace capitalist economic inequality with Marxist economic destruction and death.
And it is labor unions that are the primary advocates of Marxist revolutionary overthrow of the United States. Michael Lerner, a top official at SEIU, is currently engaged in a treasonous conspiracy with other union leaders and likely President Obama to foment another financial crisis in the banking industry by fomenting a "mortgage strike." He announced this plan not long ago, and it's already underway. The only reason anyone knows about it is thanks to Glenn Beck and his research team, who uncovered the conspiracy to commit economic terrorism and revealed it on his program two days ago. Already several Congresspersons are calling for a federal investigation, and with any luck, Lerner and his co-conspirators, which likely include other union leaders like Richard Trumka and other leftist icons like William Ayers, Bernadine Dohrn and Frances Fox Piven, will be arrested and charged.
While labor unions had a legitimate place in the early years of the Industrial Revolution, they are now beyond their usefulness when it comes to worker safety and rights, and they have become nothing more than wage negotiation instruments, and worst of all, the union bosses (not the membership) have stepped outside even that legitimate role and have become Marxist/Socialist/Progressive political machines that no longer represent the interests of the workers, but who are instead advocating and working for fundamental socialist transformation of the United States (and other nations).
There is nothing inherently wrong with workers unionizing for collective bargaining IN THE PRIVATE SECTOR. The dynamic between a private business owner and his employees is such that collective bargaining is beneficial to employees, but not so powerful, when not given inordinate power and influence by government, that it can harm business. The real problem is public sector unionization, which even arch-Progressive FDR flatly stated was not something that could ever be permitted.
But labor unions, at least at the top, are no longer interested in creating safe working conditions for employees and negotiating fair wage and benefit structures, they are about radical revolutionary Marxist reformation of society as a whole, and that cannot be permitted. And that's why the leadership of the major labor unions in the US who are now conspiring to overthrow the government of the United States by force using economic terrorism need to be arrested and charged with treason, among other federal offenses. And the President's collusion and complicity with the labor unions in this "fundamental transformation" is why he needs to be impeached, removed from office, arrested for treason, tried and sentenced.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
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