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Re: The battle of Wisconsin-labor unions
So what the hell does 'good decisions' mean?
I took that as a reference to either A) good education, B) building up your resume young, or C) a combo of both.
My point is, i've seen all of the above, and the person is totally clean, no social problems (i.e. substance abuse, poor worker), all that stuff AND be doctors and not be able to get a job.
And before you say, "well, they could've got a job, just not what they are qualified for"... a guy I know couldn't even get a job as a taxi driver and was a doctor.
I knew another guy that was a doctor working at Wal-Mart.
Re: The battle of Wisconsin-labor unions
No...I think that's exactly what you're saying...was it being married that you objected to? I don't quite get it...
What I saw you say before...and what you continue to say is...I did it...why can't everyone else? and if you can't...well you must have fucked up.
- Communist China
- Rep: 130
Re: The battle of Wisconsin-labor unions
If the government was capable of truly helping out those is need, I would be more supportive of measures to do so. But government is NOT immune to the forces of economics, despite what it claims it can shield people from that the private sector cannot.
Terrible things happen, but injecting government hurts as often as it helps. If you don't like a permanent underclass - don't support welfare, which is its main cause. If you don't like corporatism, don't support regulatory agencies, which inevitably get captured by the most powerful people in the industry, resulting in corruption, perverse incentives, and discriminate heavily against new businesses.
The State solution isn't a solution at all, and as much as we would like to see beneficial collectivism, ultimately government can only consume, not produce. They're takers before givers, and when they try to print money to avoid raising taxes, they devalue our savings and hurt our credit. The application of force (i.e. government) freezes things in time, but progress is always about the future, not the present.
Wisconsin, like a lot of states, is broke. They made promises they couldn't keep, and sadly people believed them.
This event having made me think a lot of it, I'm against so-called 'Right to Work' laws but only because of the employer's right to choose to deal exclusively with a union.
Mitch, should federal employees be unionized too?