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Social Issues and Politics
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[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 7:55:13 AM 
if there are a million people there and a thousand earned a million dollars, they have very little effect on the average, but yes, some are higher and some are lower
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by _strat_ from Thursday, February 05, 2009 2:03:50 AM)
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 7:54:23 AM 
I would have to drive thousands of miles to find a CAW worker, and the big three will be out of business before I go that way I think

if business flourished, workers would become scarce and companies would have to do things to atract them.  

tax rate, top tier is there, botom is 15%federal (after the first 10K or so) and here 10% provincial after the first 16K)

Respect isnt given by a title or a membership, its something that most people have, if you dont, in either a union or managment position, you create problems.
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by ronhartsell from Thursday, February 05, 2009 4:09:12 AM)
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 7:50:33 AM 
you mentioned a pension plan, its invested in the stock market, therefore, you are an owner of these companies.  most stocks are owned by a pension or mutual fund
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by ronhartsell from Thursday, February 05, 2009 4:11:18 AM)
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 7:49:41 AM 
sure, its member dues, that the unions spend pushing labour friendly candidates, while complaining that corporations donating money to candidates are trying to buy votes.  I was a union member, earning less than minimum wage when I started at this company.  thats less than minimum after paying union dues.  Watched the union fight the termination of 2 members who were sexualy harasing ANOTHER MEMBER.  watched unions grieve the right dicipline, going to arbitration, and lose, time and time again, just because the company had to pay most of the apb cost.  sugested an arbitration cost loser pay system, but no one interested in that.

Promote the one who works harder, sells more, and get a grievance because the guy who was here before him, slacks off, calls in sick and doesnt try wants a promotion.

at the the 6-7 digit cheques, its a simple mater of scarcity.  the CEO of a major company has huge knowledge and drive to get there.  I wouldnt do it, hell I dont want another promotion, despite the fact it would probably push me into 6 figures, the time comitment is too huge.  yesterday I worked 14.5 hours.  sure I am counting 2.5 hours to drive here.  I dont do that every day.  I do work, Every day.  check email... etc  some days its a small time, but I do that because it needs to be done.  

who has deeper pockets, UAW or GM?  who earns more, the CEO of GM or the head of the union?  well, since the CEO of ford and gm are earning total compensation this year of $1, and the head of chrylser stoped drawing a paycheque last year, right now, union membership looks good.  whos fault is it that the "big" three are in the mess they are in.  honestly its shared.  the workers earn an unrealistic wage, and the quality of product sucks, both from a customer and design point of view.  some design points go back to the union, as things that should be automated cant be in that environ, and things that need to be adressed with worker quality are not, because unions prevent dicipline.  the overall design and vision of where the companies went sucks also, and thats managments fault.  if people keep buying corolas and civics, dont spend a ton of money on the hummer brand, duh!
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by ronhartsell from Thursday, February 05, 2009 4:20:07 AM)
[ron h] Thursday, February 05, 2009 4:20:07 AM 
...unions are not supported by the government or tax dollars, they are supported by the membership at a rate (typically) of 2 hours pay per month per member...and it costs money to run a union...and unions do have to politic for regulations and fight in the courts against unfair labor practices and what not, just like any other industry (except our pockets aren't as deep as most)...and as far as being outdated, in 99% of the cases we're just trying to keep what we've earned to this point...not to regress!!...we are tired of management telling the world it's because of us (labor) that they can't (supposedly) make a profit while they are cutting 6 and 7 digit checks for themselves!!...wtf is that??
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by Head banger from Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:28:01 AM)
[ron h] Thursday, February 05, 2009 4:11:18 AM 
...that may work, but you need to have $$ to invest, the average worker here does not!!...
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by Head banger from Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:19:04 AM)
[ron h] Thursday, February 05, 2009 4:09:12 AM 
...I am ignorant to the ways of Canadian government and her policies...so I really can't comment other than to say I believe that I have read on a number of occasions that you are taxed at 50% ??  I know it's an issue with a lot of athletes...but that may explain (partially) why some services are much cheaper (if true) than down here...and I don't honestly know of too many companies that offer more than the laws require them to, I'm sure they're out there, but where??...I'll be the first to admit that not all companies would need organized labor if companies took care of their workers (some do) but the majority do not...I mean, why give more than you have to, this isn't charity...but at one time there were no incentives at all for workers...it may seem hard to imagine nowadays, but ask your parents or grandparents what it used to be like...we take a lot for granted these days...union membership is at it's lowest in decades and you know what??...the middle class is at it's lowest percentage in decades as well...organized labor has no intention of being as wealthy as management, it's much greater than our wages, it's about quality of life...I don't need a CEOs salary to live a good life...it's about protection (insurance), retirement (our Social Security program is in debt and may not be around when I'm at that age), safety regulations (I want to go home after a hard days work and I don't need my supervisor asking me to do something stupid so they can cut costs or save time), respect (just because you have a 'title' doesn't mean you're better than me or that you 'own' me), it's about pride and self respect...ask a worker who belongs to the CAW (Canadian Auto Workers)  if their quality of life hasn't improved...I've met with some personally and they couldn't be happier!!...but each countrie and state is unique unto itself...but what I've been posting these past several days is what I (and many others) see on an everyday basis right here, right now!!
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by Head banger from Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:17:13 AM)
[_strat_] Thursday, February 05, 2009 2:08:14 AM 
Could be. But of the two, only the skill is under my control. And even that just so long as the public education holds out.
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by Head banger from Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:20:00 AM)
[_strat_] Thursday, February 05, 2009 2:06:40 AM 
...so, basicaly they have to pay the overseas labourers what they should be paying to everyone? Even less, actualy. I mean, 5% more whats that? One cup of coffe per week? Not a big improvement.
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by Head banger from Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:22:37 AM)
[_strat_] Thursday, February 05, 2009 2:03:50 AM 
The "average" wage may be a bit of a deception - over here its around 800€ - but very few actualy get that. Most get around 500, and the handfull with really big incomes bring the averages up. IDK, maybe the same at you end? I guess you have more people that are richer than our rich people.
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by Head banger from Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:17:13 AM)
[_strat_] Thursday, February 05, 2009 2:01:21 AM 
With you a 100%. No unions, and we would be sleeping in our offices, and working for a slice of bread a day, like they used to in th 1800s. Or like they do in China still.

People suffered a lot to give us the rights we have today. Striking, sabotage, fuck, they fought for it in a war - and now just a proposal to raise a minimal wage for a couple of €, will have everyone shouting out about stiffling businesses.
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by ronhartsell from Wednesday, February 04, 2009 7:25:37 PM)
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:28:01 AM 
Obama said today that trade bariers are damaging to all parties of the trade, which was where I started.

Ron, I dont deny that unions had their place, but its a historical place, like that of the musket.  when they reduce the ability of business to work, create money, and pay people, hold back the higher achievers, thats unfortunatly why they are a barier to their own members.  now they are a business, with slogans and marketing like any other, but only a business, out to make money, not create what they claim.
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:22:37 AM 
so the stats are different, thought they might be.  one of the problems of comparing stats, there the 6% could all be looking for work, here the 5% are mostly not trying to find work.  makes a significant difference in the number of employers looking to find people.  we are reduced here to importing labour from overseas, even to work in fast food.  what a cost, you have to pay 5% more than the average rate, about $11 where minimum is $8.40 and flights, health care and at least part of room and board.  find good local talent, you take care of them
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by _strat_ from Wednesday, February 04, 2009 7:33:20 AM)
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:20:00 AM 
your skill and demand for it
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by _strat_ from Wednesday, February 04, 2009 7:34:53 AM)
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:19:42 AM 
most small businesses employ some people, and as time goes on their goal is to grow.
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by _strat_ from Wednesday, February 04, 2009 3:48:37 PM)
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:19:04 AM 
paying CEO's in stock sounds like a great idea, as most people have only the stock market to invest in for retirement, and the failing stock market is the reason that DB plans are on the way out.  generaly they are vested for longer term employees, which may explain the CEO stat.  personaly I was glad to see a DC plan come to my workplace, much more cash for me.
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by ronhartsell from Wednesday, February 04, 2009 6:16:11 PM)
[Head banger] Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:17:13 AM 
explain why companies provide more benefits than regulations or contracts require?
explain also, why the province with the least unions in canada has the highest average wage.  thats the middle class benefiting.  is this the same in the states?
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by ronhartsell from Wednesday, February 04, 2009 7:25:37 PM)
[ron h] Wednesday, February 04, 2009 7:25:37 PM 

And here's one last thing I want to say to those who find it fashionable to bash the Unions...

...try to name something at the workplace that helps a person be middle class that wasn't brought about by labor unions...

...think hard...the 8 hour work day, contract wages, paid vacations, paid holidays, retirement plans, health and hospitalization insurance,  overtime pay, call-in pay, seniority rights, recall rights, safety regulations, grievance and arbitration procedures, whatever, and I can tell you where and when American workers went on bitterly faught strikes to bring those things about...

...Think, too about public schools, free text books, one-man-one-vote, direct elections of U.S. senators, child labor laws, state hospitals, workers compensation for killed or injured workers, unemployment insurance, minimum wages, mechanic lien laws, abolition of debtors prisons, anti-blacklisting laws, Social Security, all of which American unions agitated for, in some cases started in the 1880's...

...Any person who works for a living owes an unrepayable debt to the men and women who, acting through their unions, brought about by collective bargaining the wages, hours and working conditions that are today so common-place in our mines, factories, stores, and offices, whether unionized or not, that are taken for granted...

...They should never be taken for granted, for it's these very wages, benefits, and working conditions that are under assault today.  Every time an air traffic controllers union gets busted, Greyhound Bus driver or Eastern Airlines pilots lose a strike, Caterpillar workers return to work without a contract our unions "give back a benefit", a little more of the "middle class" has been diminished...

...it has been said that "as the unions go, so do the middle class"...you cannot deny the parallels!!

[~ MG_Metalgoddess~] Wednesday, February 04, 2009 6:49:15 PM 
This kinda goes back on the conversation,..  But its interesting

First-quarter layoffs

The following chart is a selection of some announcements of job cuts since the beginning of the year. Some numbers are estimates.

By The Wall Street Journal
 

Company  Announcement date Jobs cut % of work force   

Time Warner Cable

2/4/2009

1,250

3

Panasonic

2/4/2009

15,000

5

Electronic Arts

2/3/2009

1,100

11

PNC Financial Services Group

2/3/2009

5,800

10

King Pharmaceuticals

2/3/2009

760

22

Liz Claiborne

2/3/2009

725

8

SAS

2/3/2009

9,000

40

Macy's

2/2/2009

7,000

4

NEC

1/30/2009

20,000

7

Hitachi

1/30/2009

7,000

2

Eastman Kodak

1/29/2009

4,500

18

Bon-Ton Stores

1/29/2009

1,150

3

Black & Decker

1/29/2009

1,200

5

AstraZeneca

1/29/2009

7,400

11

Ford Motor Credit

1/28/2009

1,200

20

Starbucks 1/28/2009 6,700 4
Boeing 1/28/2009 10,000* 6
Jabil Circuit 1/28/2009 3,000 4
SAP 1/28/2009 3,000 6
STMicroelectronics 1/28/2009 4,500 9
Corning 1/27/2009 3,500 13
Cooper Industries 1/27/2009 2,200 7
Clariant 1/27/2009 1,000 5
Texas Instruments 1/26/2009 3,400 12
Molex 1/26/2009 9,300 29
Caterpillar 1/26/2009 20,000 18
Home Depot 1/26/2009 7,000 2
Sprint Nextel 1/26/2009 8,000 13
Pfizer 1/26/2009 8,300 1
ING 1/26/2009 7,000 5
Philips Electronics 1/26/2009 6,000 5
Corus 1/26/2009 3,500 1
Harley-Davidson 1/23/2009 1,100 11
Microsoft 1/22/2009 5,000 5
Huntsman 1/22/2009 1,175 9
Intel 1/21/2009 6,000** 7
UAL 1/21/2009 1,000 2
Eaton 1/20/2009 5,200 6
Bose 1/20/2009 1,000 1
Rohm & Haas 1/20/2009 900 57
Clear Channel 1/20/2009 1,850 9
ConocoPhillips 1/16/2009 1,300 4
Circuit City 1/16/2009 34,000 100***
Pfizer 1/16/2009 3,200**** 3
Advanced Micro Devices 1/16/2009 1,100 9
Hertz Global Holdings 1/16/2009 4,000 13
WellPoint 1/16/2009 1,500 4
Saks 1/15/2009 1,100 9
MeadWestvaco 1/15/2009 2,000 1
Autodesk 1/15/2009 750 1
Motorola 1/14/2009 4,000 6
Barclays 1/14/2009 2,100 13
Neiman Marcus 1/13/2009 375 3
Cummins 1/13/2009 800 2
Seagate Technology 1/12/2009 800 1
Cessna 1/12/2009 2,000 N/A
Walgreen 1/8/2009 1,000 9
Lenovo Group 1/8/2009 2,500 11
EMC 1/7/2009 2,400 7
Logitech International 1/6/2009 500 5
Alcoa 1/6/2009 15,000 15
Cigna 1/5/2009 1,100 4

Total:

 

294,235

 

*Includes Jan. 9 announcement of 4,500 layoffs from commercial-airplane staff

**Number of employees affected by plant closures, not all will lose jobs
***Company in liquidation

****Includes announcements of 2,400 cuts on Jan. 16 and 800 layoffs on Jan. 13

[ron h] Wednesday, February 04, 2009 6:16:11 PM 
...here are some examples of what I'm trying to relate...these figures are a couple of years old now, but you'll get my point...

...Pay for the average CEO at a "S&P (Standard & Poor) 500" company is now 430 times that of the average US worker.

...More than one in four of nearly 200 large firms surveyed by Equilar Inc. granted raises of at least 25% to their CEOs.

...A survey of 350 companies by Mercer Human Resource Consulting found that the median CEO earned $975,000 in base salary and $6 million in total compensation.

...Defined benefit pensions for workers are under attack, as only 21% of private sector workers are covered by such plans.  Meanwhile, 69% of "Fortune 1000" CEOs have defined benefit plans.

...Richard D. Fairbank of Capitol One Financial Corp. tops the list of CEOs cashing in on huge stock options.  He earns no salary or bonus, but his return on options in 2006 amounted to over $18 million.  His options payout the year before?  $249.3 million!!

...Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) reported that software maker Ariba Inc. paid CEO Robert M. Calderoni $104 million - a 75% increase over the previous year - while the company's returns to shareholders fell 39%.

...US investors singled out executive compensation as their top concern over the next year, according to another ISS survey.


This is what I'm talking about when I state - CORPORATE GREED!!!
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