Showing posts with label public sector unions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public sector unions. Show all posts

Friday, July 26, 2013

Krauthammer & McArdle Conduct Detroit Postmortems

From Dr. Krauthammer:

If there’s an iron rule in economics, it is Stein’s Law (named after Herb, former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers): “If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.”

Detroit, for example, can no longer go on borrowing, spending, raising taxes, and dangerously cutting such essential services as street lighting and police protection. So it stops. It goes bust.

Cause of death? Corruption, both legal and illegal, plus a classic case of reactionary liberalism in which the governing Democrats — there’s been no Republican mayor in half a century — simply refused to adapt to the straitened economic circumstances that followed the post–World War II auto boom. . . .

. . . The legal corruption was the cozy symbiosis of Democratic politicians and powerful unions, especially the public-sector unions that gave money to elect the politicians who negotiated their contracts — with wildly unsustainable health and pension benefits. . . .

McArdle's post-mortem finds a tsunami of causes. She is certainly right about the number of contributing causes, though I think that, from the standpoint of simple math, Krauthammer has it right. That said, this from Ms. McArdle:

If you listen to the interwebs, the answer is “terrible, Democratic-run urban politics.” Or “union-busting anti-labor policies” in Southern states that transformed solid middle-class jobs in the Midwest into near-minimum-wage jobs in states such as Alabama and Tennessee. Or maybe “racism.” Or “the urban underclass.”

All of these answers are impossibly reductive. The city of Detroit has no one problem; it has a constellation of them. Here, in no particular order, are some of the most important factors. . . .

The factors she lists:

- The decline of shipping along the Detroit River.

- The claim that the South stole high paying union jobs by allowing for non-union near minimum wage pay is a falsehood. There is little wage disparity between Michigan UAW workers and non-union workers in Southern Right To Work states. The three killers have been expansive health and pension benefits for UAW retirees, deeply inefficient union work rules, and competition.

- Post-WWII UAW Pattern Bargaining tactics failed when competition came to the auto industry. This was at least as big a problem for the UAW and the auto industry as the availability of jobs in Southern right to work states.

- Middle Class flight: This was a real problem for Detroit caused by a huge increase in crime during the 50's and 60's. It picked up even more in the wake of the 1967 race riots - the most violent in the nation.

- White Flight and Reverse Racism: A large chunk of the white population fled after the race riots. Those that were left were subject to a series of deeply anti-white black dominated city governments.







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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Today's Good News - Public Sector Unions Withering In Wisconsin

Today's good news comes from Wisconsin, where Gov. Scott Walker's efforts to make public sector union membership voluntary and limit their collective bargaining rights has borne fruit. This from JSOnline:

Wisconsin's public employees are leaving their unions in droves, which should be no surprise: With passage of Act 10 in 2011, public unions in the Badger State lost many of their reasons for being. . . .

The "budget-repair bill" pushed through the Legislature by Republicans and signed into law by Gov. Scott Walker limited bargaining to wages only, and then only up to the cost of living; it also required unions to recertify each year and barred the automatic collection of union dues. . . .

Relying on federal financial records, the Journal Sentinel's Dan Bice found union membership has declined by 50% or more at some unions, including the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees District Council 48, which represents Milwaukee city and county workers. It has gone from more than 9,000 members and income exceeding $7 million in 2010 to about 3,500 members and a deep deficit by the end of last year. . . .

One would think this a success story both for the people of Wisconsin and public sector workers. But the rest of the article gives voice to critics, with the biggest complaint being that it hurts the Democrat Party. While Democrats are utterly focused on giving effected people a "choice" when it comes to abortion, that is where their support for "choice" of any kind ends.

What the left wants with forced unionization is really nothing more than indentured servitude. Moreover, nothing is more corrupting than public sector unions that have a political agenda and keys to the public treasury. Detroit is a perfect example of the end result of this blue social model.

Wisconsin public workers now have more money in their pockets, the state budget is balanced, and people are exercising their choice whether to fund a union. Only a leftie could be unhappy.







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Friday, March 8, 2013

NYC & The Benefits Of A Unionized Public School Education

This from Breitbart:

According to officials from City University of New York, a full 80 percent of high school graduates in New York City can’t read when they graduate. . . . And that’s for the students who graduate. New York City has the lowest graduation rate for black and Hispanic male students in the nation, with only 37 percent graduating. But teachers start off making $45,530 with benefits, and max out at over $100,000.

It’s not just Bloomberg and New York. In the city of Los Angeles, according to The Education Trust-West, just one in every 20 black kindergarteners will graduate from a four-year California college. Overall, a whopping 40 percent of high school students entering public colleges across the country require at least one remedial class in reading, writing or math.

This is the legacy of a teachers union-driven system in our major cities. And it is minorities who pay the highest price.

As IBD pointed out in 2011, spending on public school education in the U.S. increased 375% between 1970 and 2010. For that investment, our nation received a massive increase in unionized teachers, but no increase whatsoever in student performance in math or reading, and a slight decline in student performance in science.



Public schools are failing our children, and in particular, minority children. This is a travesty, and teachers' unions are at the center of perpetuating this failed system. The left refuses to do anything to remedy this situation, irrespective of how much it is hurting their constituencies, because the teachers unions are close to, if not the largest contributor to the Democorat party. And equally maddening is the fact that the right does not use this as part of a full court press to win minority voters. Public schools that are failing minority students are, as many black luminaries have noted, the "civil rights issue of our time."

Related Posts:

1. Public Sector Unions: A Toxin, A Crisis & An Opportunity
2. Read'n, Writ'n & Unioniz'n
3. What, Marx Or Lenin Weren't Available?
4. Gov. Chris Christie, What Leadership Looks Like
5. California: From Riches To Public Sector Unions To Ruin
6. Detroit's Public School System, School Board & Teachers' Union
7. Unions & Teachers: The Alpha & Omega
8. Living With Public Sector Unions
9. Public Sector Unions
10. Obama, The Stimulus & Teachers' Unions
11. Yet Another Reason Why Public Sector Unions Should Be Done Away With
12. Grand Theft Democrat
13. Another Win For Teachers Unions, Another Defeat For DC Students
14. Reason 10,001 Why Public Sector Unions Need To Be Outlawed
15. Public Sector Unions Go To War To Prevent Democratic Change In Wisconsin
16. Change You Can't Have: Obama & The DNC Interfere In Wisconsin State Politics
17. Do Public Sector Workers Have A Fundamental Right To Organize?
18. An Instant Classic
19. Boehner, Obama & The DNC: The State Public Sector Union Issues Gets Nationalized
20. Wisconsin - What's At Stake 21. A Democrat & Former NYC Schools Chancellor Condemns Teachers' Unions
22. For The Children? Really?
23. All Of The Stars Align - Time For Republicans To Court The Black Vote
24. NYC & The Benefits Of A Unionized Public School Education







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Thursday, December 13, 2012

An Interesting Argument With A Union Supporter On "Right To Work"

Update: Charles Krauthammer has weighed in on the "right to work" issue and private sector unions with thoughts that mirror my own. It is worth a read.

In a post below, Michigan & Labor Unions, Myth & Reality, I congratulated Michigan on passing their "right to work" legislation. In response to that post, union member and supporter Mr. Joseph Garcia was kind enough to leave a lengthy comment taking issue with my post. I post below below Mr. Garcia's comment, my response and the response of OBH:

Joseph Garcia said...

I find it interesting that this bullshit is going around again.

Instead of siphoning all your information from Rush Limbaugh, or being a corporate sycophant, you need to do a little more reading on the subject.

Let me introduce you to the concept of right to work with a personal anecdote.

While living in North Carolina I worked for a company called Dallas Electric (a slight misnomer considering the only licensed electrician was the owner) and Plumbing.

I was an 'electrician helper', meaning I followed around the electrician (who was not required to be licensed or have a formal education at all.) and helped do electrical service calls and new construction installations.

NONE of the electricians I worked with were Journeyman. While the owner, let's call him Mr. Stroupe, owned several cars, houses, motorcycles and other small businesses, none of the wealth he had attained with his ventures "trickled down" to his employees.

I worked with an electrician who was a 12 year employee of Mr. Stroupe, who once solemnly confided in me that he made 13 dollars an hour. While he was a very good parts installer, he didn't have a clue as to how electricity worked, none of it. He could barely read prints (instead, he relied mostly on me to do most of his print reading and "ciphering" (mathematical calculations) and code reading for him.

Don't get me wrong. This was a very nice, very humble man. That is why your bullshit pisses me off. This man, we'll call him Frank, has no retirement, has no benefits, lives in a house OWNED by his boss (with rent taken from his check monthly.), and he is not a properly trained electrician.

Fast forward 3 years and I found myself learning about the unions and becoming a member of IBEW local 532, out of Billings, Montana, and going through a four year apprenticeship program paid for by both the union and the union contractors, with on the job training and a qualification to take the state test afterwards. (In Montana, you must take an NEC code test, and have at least 1100 hours of classroom training and 8000 hours of on the job training to become a licensed journeyman electrician.)
The company I worked for in Montana, CEI, was a much more ethically inclined and employee based company. It was started by three electricians who felt that they would, up until the company began being successful, pay themselves only what they paid their journeyman, and they would also work with their men as well.

The company started to grow and was eventually consolidated to be owned by one individual who still operates the company on those same principles to this day. He is very rich, he has a very low turn over rate, and all of his employees are highly regarded and highly paid. This is because Montana is not a right to work state. Hiring any old Joe off the street to do your electrical work for 10 dollars an hour is a terrible idea, not only for your own liability as a business owner, but also for your customer and the welfare of his workers or family.

The unions as we know them today are necessary. Not all companies operate like Costco, with the CEO only paying himself a meager 300,000 dollars a year and paying his employees 15 dollars an hour with benefits. Most companies, even small ones, are run like WalMart. Operating at maximum profit with little to no regard for the workers or responsibility to the places where they are located.

Unions came about because people like the Rockefellors, when building railroads and mines, were paying their employees with company scrip, forcing them to live in company housing and work ungodly hours for minimal pay. They threw out workers who were too old, or if an employee died, they would kick the family out of the company housing to make way for the replacement workers family.

Unions came about to fight greed and corporate abuse, pure and simple. What you see today is unions simply asking for renewed contracts, not raises. They're asking that their benefits not be subsidized by a fractured Wall Street, and instead that they start their own programs. These people are asking for reasonable things and being demonized by idiots like you.

I refuse to feel sorry for the billionare royalty in this company crying because they have to pay benefits and a living wage. And I can't believe someone of seeming intelligence, such as yourself, would buy into this bullshit hook line and sinker.

When you have nobody to hold accountable, and nobody to report to besides arbitrary shareholders, running a business anything goes. To hell with the American economy, right? Lets open sweatshops in China and pay their workers 50 cents an hour, and treat them just as the Rockefellors treated us here in the 20s and 30s. You're an idiot.


My Response:

Mr. Garcia: As I said earlier, thank you for stopping by and engaging in discussion.

Let's leave aside, for the moment, the historical union contributions (and assaults) on our economy with a few provisos. I will grant that one can colorably argue that unions made sense at the start of industrial revolution in closed economies, where workers had little mobility and inferior knowledge of the dangerousness of working conditions. There is precious little about that set of conditions that exists today.

For one, workers today have the single greatest asset for keeping employers honest – mobility. If you don't like your current job and believe your skills warrant more money in the free market, there is nothing whatsoever to stop you from changing employers or going to work for yourself. Indeed, your personal anecdote demonstrates that you did precisely that.

And the converse is true. If an employer does not pay fair wages and benefits, they are not going to be able to keep high quality employees – not in an age of competitive business, easy access to information and high mobility.

Britain has been a “right to work” country for decades, One of my young relatives living there recently became, coincidentally enough, a licensed journeyman electrician. After working for a year for decent wages in the UK, he decided to spend two years working for much higher wages in Australia. His employers in the UK offered to double his wages and sweeten his benefits if he would stay. Could that have happened if he was in a union shop?

Now, as to Frank, who was it that was forcing him to stay in his position? Who is it that was keeping him from bettering his position by getting training? Now, if he was incapable of reading or doing math, could he ever have passed the training to become a journeyman electrician? Was he being paid the fair market value of his services under the circumstances? And is it your position that people should be paid more than the fair market value of their services? That last bit is the kicker, because when you do that, eventually, the business will fail in respect to other businesses that are more efficient.

Now let's talk about “right to work.” One, right to work only gives people a choice as to whether or not to join unions. It does not change collective bargaining rights, nor does it force unions to “free ride” non-union employees. Two, it makes unions pay a lot more attention to their dues paying members and how they use the dues they collect. Having said all that, can you give me one principled reason why anyone should be forced to pay union dues as a precondition of employment in their chosen profession? I believe from the bottom of my heart that doing that goes against every freedom this nation stands for.

Your statement that CEI was run the way it was and that it became a success because Montana is a closed shop state is a non-sequitur. There is nothing about laws regarding union membership that would cause the scenario you describe from being played out in any of our fifty states.

As to your other examples, correct me if I am wrong, but isn't COSTO primarily a non-union business? Some of the locales are staffed by Teamsters in the noth-east, but the vast majority of stores are staffed by non-union employees.

As to your statement about Walmart and other businesses, your statements show a lack of grounding in reality.  In the private sector, a job is only created if it will add value to the bottom line of the person or persons who have taken the risk to create the business. Anyone who creates jobs merely for welfare will soon not have a business. Job creators set the amount of pay and benefits for a new job at a level to hire and keep employees of whatever quality the employer wants. If its too low, as discussed above, the employees will move on to bigger and better things and the company won't find acceptable new employees. That is eminently fair to both parties – and it is the very essence of free market economics.

As to your statement that “what you see today is unions simply asking for renewed contracts, not raises,” that's pure fantasy. How many examples do you need of unions being utterly unreasonable? For what its worth, I am very familiar with union contracts, and I was, for several years, an expert on UAW contracts. I feel it safe to say that virtually every union has work rules that are incredibly inefficient and that add significantly to the cost of business. Virtually every union makes it difficult if not impossible to fire underperforming workers. And can you say “Twinkies?” I will just point to the examples OBH (see below) has left in response to your statements.

Bottom line, over time, if for any particular employer the union adds too much to the bottom line, the businesses will go under or will relocate. The U.S. steel industry, the coal industry, the automotive industry – how many examples do you need? And why do you think so many high-tech jobs are being created overseas at inception, such as, for example, I-pads?

Now, I have never called for the abolition of unions in the private sector. While I think private sector unions are truly parasitical at the moment, if they ever reform, they can still be an effective player in our economy. I think “right to work” strikes the proper balance in terms of union membership, and indeed, it will go a long way to forcing private sector unions to finally come up with a model for the 21st century. I also oppose sweeheart deals for unions, including government mandates to use only union employers for any particular jobs.

As an aside, that is much different than my take on public sector unions. There is little more corrupting to our nation than public sector unions. To the extent that they are allowed to continue to exist, it should only be under right to work rules and without the rights to collective bargaining or the right to strike.

Mr. Garcia, correct me if I am wrong, but what you are arguing for is socialism, where everyone is guaranteed a job at a particular wage and benefits for life. The problem is that, in socialist economies of yore, people pretended to work while the state pretended to pay them. Their standard of living was far below that of, well, our nation's current Wal-Mart employees, and indeed, virtually every one of those economies has collapsed. The massive creation of wealth that we have seen in the U.S. is because we have enough free market capitalism in the system.  That may not always be true.

When private sector unions figure out how to partner with business to create wealth while still representing their members fairly, then they will provide a service of value to their members, the employers, our economy and our nation. But that is not happening today, and it is why the only things keeping unions afloat, despite massively declining membership in the private sector, are government mandates for closed shops. If private sector unions cannot survive in a right to work environment, than they need to reform or become extinct.

I look forward to your response Sir.



-------------------------------------------------------------------------

OBloodyHell said...

THIS really needs to make the main thread.

Union Thugs Demolish Lansing,Michigan Hot Dog Vendor Clint Tarver’s Equipment, shouting “N*Gger, Uncle Tom” 

Yeah, Republicans and Tea Party types are the racists in America....
I'll address [Mr. Garcia's points]:

}}} This is because Montana is not a right to work state.

No, this has NOTHING to do with RTW or not. Every single thing you describe could be done in a RTW state. EVERY ONE. The difference is, either the company, and its operators, are professional people, or not. This has not the slightest thing to do with UNIONS. You have made a false association, one that unions love to promote, which is that "union" == "professionalism".

I am a computer programmer. We're an unruly lot, there has been occasional attempts to create unions, but they go nowhere, because programmers are too independently minded.

I can state to you that, beyond a doubt, I have met both scrupulous and unscrupulous computer people. Some who were very professional, and others who were markedly unprofessional.

I've been working for decades in a shirtsleeve environment, and I can state that professionalism is an ATTITUDE, not a "membership" quality. And this is true of every person I know in the so-called "professional" class, many of whom were non-union.

}}} This was a very nice, very humble man. That is why your bullshit pisses me off. This man, we'll call him Frank, has no retirement, has no benefits, lives in a house OWNED by his boss (with rent taken from his check monthly.), and he is not a properly trained electrician.

So? This is at least partly his own choice. Is there no community college nearby, no technical school, where he can take classes and learn these things on his own? Why does the employer have to train someone to do the job they've clearly selected as a career? Do I, as a programmer, expect IBM to train me? Or do I go to college, learn my skills, and THEN go to work for IBM? Again -- you make a false association, this time "employer" == "job training".

This doesn't mean that the employer CAN'T train me -- certainly some businesses can finance scholarships that entail the recipient to work for their company for a set period of time.

But the employers are not OBLIGATED to do so.
}}}} Most companies, even small ones, are run like WalMart. Operating at maximum profit with little to no regard for the workers or responsibility to the places where they are located. 

And again, you make a false association. Wal-Mart is there to MAKE MONEY for their shareholders. They do things to do that, period. Wal-mart has positioned itself as the low-price leader -- the place you go to if you care about low prices and nothing more.

The fact that Wal-Marts don't provide tremendous benefits for low-level employees is part of the way they do that. Every dime paid out to those employees is going to be -- HAS TO BE -- passed on to the consumers in the form of higher prices.

If people care more about the wages paid to employees, then they can make that clear, and go shop somewhere else... This is one reason "Target" is so popular.

If Wal-Mart starts losing too much business to Target, then they will make adjustments to change that. That's the way business works.

As it is, the fact that Wal-Mart generally eats Target's lunch says more than enough about what CONSUMERS want.

"Consumers are too stupid to make their own choices"? Eph ANYONE who says that. Who died and made THEM the Dictator of "What Is Right And Proper"?

Consumers are NOT idiots, at least not on the pure level. They make rational choices sufficiently often that they make the RIGHT choices most of the time.

Not saying YOU are one to promote such nonsense, but it's a common refrain after pointing out that what consumers choose is what American business is all about.

BBC - The Code - The Wisdom of the Crowd
}}} Not all companies operate like Costco, with the CEO only paying himself a meager 300,000 dollars a year and paying his employees 15 dollars an hour with benefits.

My uncle used to work for Costco. They were paying cashiers 2x min wage even back in the 1980s.

Why?

Nothing to do with ethics. Nothing to do with "employee consideration".

The answer is "shrinkage".

In any given business, "shrinkage" can be a tremendous factor. Shrinkage is the term for "stuff we no longer have but didn't sell or return". That is -- it's been shoplifted. Now, there are TWO sources of shoplifting, and you really only hear about one of them most of the time, that is "customer shoplifting". That's actually the LESSER of the two forms of shoplifting, representing something like 20-25% of all "shrinkage".

The remainder comes from employees walking out the back door with a case of beer, or a new shirt, or whatever.

It's the vast majority of "shrinkage", this employee theft.

And the better you pay employees, the less willing they are to risk a decent job by taking five-fingered discounts.

Costco, my uncle told me, had its "shrinkage" rates down to under 2%, when retail at the time typically had rates up as high as 4%.

Costco, therefore, felt it worthwhile to have higher wages, it paid for itself holistically.

Why don't others follow suit? I can't answer that -- possibly corporate resistance to the idea, possibly just plain orneriness on the part of some mid-to-high-level bureaucrat. Companies sometimes do stupid things...
I have no idea if you're open minded or not. Typically, in my experience, people who espouse the views you do do so expecting only an echo of their own views, as opposed to reasoned opposition. Faced with reasoned opposition, they devolve into personal attacks and general invective.

=================================
Bertrand Russell's 10 commandments for philosophizers:

#8 - Find more pleasure in intelligent dissent than in passive agreement, for, if you value intelligence as you should, the former implies a deeper agreement than the latter.
=================================


I'm going to presume you're actually open to reasoned discourse, and that's why you've posted your comments.

I will offer you a few things that I believe will help you better grasp things than here -- while GW does touch on topics like this, Dr. Mark Perry, a professor of Economics at the U of Michigan, runs a blog which he regularly posts information about different aspects of the economy, including unions. Dr. Perry is, you will find, a largely anti-union, pro-choice advocate. He has a lively comment base, some of whom you will find are in line with your current views. While there is certainly some heat (I'm a contributor to that, I have little tolerance for people who repeat the same BS no matter how many times you refute it), you will find more than an adequate amount of reasoned responses to arguments such as your own above.

Carpe Diem

I would also recommend you read the archived editorials of both
Thomas Sowell
and
Walter Williams

Both are economics professors, and both have a considerable amount to say about not just unions, but economics in general and how it applies to race (both are black, and elderly enough to have made it up when true racism was widespread in America).

If you listen to these economics professors, you can compare their arguments to those of the opposition, and think for yourself about which one has the more valid arguments.

Dr. Perry provides data to back his arguments, while both Dr. Sowell and Dr. Williams are editorials. But all three make their cases very effectively, generally without a lot of reference to specialist understanding of Economics, and you can learn an awful lot about how the quacks and charlatans (notably Paul Krugman, who openly lies in his own economics columns) in politics and the media openly lie to you about a vast array of things.

I will also note for you a couple specific links:

Union Myths, by Thomas Sowell

Michigan becomes 24th right-to-work state and joins states creating jobs at almost 3X the rate of forced unionism states

America on the move in 2011: Away from forced-unionism states to right-to-work states
None of the 10 states experiencing the greatest net out-migration of residents in absolute terms (Alaska, California, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, and Ohio) had a Right to Work law in 2011. But seven of the eight states with the greatest net domestic in-migration in absolute numbers were Right to Work states

Public Employee Unions, by Walter Williams
BTW, one final comment.

I'm not saying unions NEVER do any good. Certainly they can push for better working conditions that can be hard to obtain by other means. But this does not mean that they are always operate for the benefit of their union brethren, much less for the benefit of society as a whole.

=================================

BTW, another link I meant to include, illustrating my point...


THIS, these days, is what unions are all too much about:

13 UAW workers at Chrysler who were caught red-handed drinking and smoking weed during work hours are reinstated

"Oh, that's just a single case!!"

Well, so were your anecdotes. Why are your anecdotes "general cases", while my anecdotes are "special exceptions"?

Anecdotes are always suspect. They can always be one-off instances and not a generalizable case.

But let's tack on a few more "anecdotes":

Wisconsin Teacher's Union defends teacher who had sex with a freshman
A Wausaukee High School teacher is facing charges for allegedly sexually assaulting a female student.

Kurt Kostelecky, 35, has been charged with 11 felonies and one misdemeanor. The alleged incidents happened in Kostelecky's classroom when the girl was a freshman.


And

Child Molesting Teacher Can’t Be Fired Thanks to Union
In 1997 a Brooklyn teacher was accused of attempting to molest a sixth-grade girl at PS 138. As it happened, he admitted the behavior, but no criminal charges were filed when all was said and done. Still one would think the fact that he inappropriately fondled a teen should be enough to get him fired from his teaching position. But then again, in New York you can’t even fire a child molester if he happens to be a teachers union member.

Thanks to the fact that it is nearly impossible to fire a teacher, this lowlife has been drawing his almost $100,000-a-year salary to do nothing. You heard that right, to do nothing.



In short -- Unions should be defending people who are wrongly accused. They should not be defending people who clearly are NOT being wrongly accused, and ARE guilty of behavior inappropriate to their field of employment.

They make no such distinction.

And this is a large part of what has turned the public against them.







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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Michigan & Labor Unions, Myth Versus Reality

The most fundamental fact about labor unions is that they do not create any wealth. They are one of a growing number of institutions which specialize in siphoning off wealth created by others, whether they are businesses or the taxpayers.

There are limits to how long unions can siphon off money from businesses without facing serious economic repercussions.

Thomas Sowell, Union Myths, NRO, 8 March 2011

Congrats to Michigan for passing a right to work law. No person should ever be forced to pay union dues as a condition of working in their chosen field. It is nothing more than state sanctioned indentured servitude.

The most oft repeated myth about labor unions are that they created the middle class and that they protect the rights of workers. The reality is that our increasing productivity since the civil war created the middle class, and labor unions today are nothing more than parasites on the economy, in addition to being the piggy bank for the left. Labor union numbers have been dwindling for half a century because of market realities, and without government mandates, they will go extinct. There is a reason GM and Chrysler went bankrupt, while foreign car manufacturers with plants in the U.S. did not. And can you say "Twinkies?"

The great economist Milton Friedman gave a short lecture on unions and their lack of any role in the free market several years ago. It is worth taking a few minutes to watch.



And just as a reminder, the real threat to our nation today comes not from the dying private sector unions that ultimately are governed by markets, but public sector unions that are not so governed. To see the effects, one need look no further than California.

Updates & Related Posts:

Powerline notes that the NYT's coverage of the Michigan right to work law omits some of the relevant facts - such as all the ones that would make the unions look bad.

At NRO, a Hillsdale Prof. gives a short history of Right-To-Work, Unions & Trust-Busting.

From Michelle Malkin, a primer on union thuggery in the age of Obama.

From Nice Deb, the union thug violence in Lansing and the left's effort to cover-up, calling it a "false flag" operation. Many links.

Via Instapundit, Byron Preston at PJM notes that the MSM has been wholly silent on the violence, hanging their hat on the canard that the video taped violence by union thugs was a false flag.

From NRO, a discussion of Michigan's modest right-to-work reform and an analysis of why the unions and the Dems are ready to go to war over it:

Democrats are panicked by the spread of right-to-work reforms because the mandatory deduction of dues from the paychecks of public-sector employees provides the party’s financial lifeblood. There are not that many UAW members or Teamsters in the country, but there are legions of bureaucrats, school workers, and surly DMV clerks — and, through its relationship with the public-sector unions, the Democratic party has a direct pipeline into the pockets of practically each and every one of them. The shrieking in Michigan isn’t about workingmen’s wages, but campaign coffers. That is why there is blood.





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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Rahm Caves To The Teachers Union In Chicago

It appears that Chicago's Mayor Rahm Emanuel has caved in to the Teachers Union in order to end the seven day old strike. The offer made to the Teachers Union, and which they have now accepted, includes:

- Suspensions without pay are eliminated
- The board must promote racial diversity in hiring
- Regarding the rehiring of laid-off teachers, now 50% of new hires must come from the laid-off pool.
- The student survey is removed from teacher evaluations (except in special circumstance)
- Merit pay rejected
- 16 percent average pay raise over four years

So the people of Chicago will continue to pay ever greater sums to underworked, overpaid and underperforming public school teachers who will not be held to objective standards of performance. I call this one a complete victory for the Teachers Union and another huge loss for the children and tax payers of Chicago. I was surprised that a Decomcrat would even start to take on a Teachers Union, given that such public sector unions form the financial foundation of the Democrat Party. I am not surprised with the outcome, particularly given that the last thing Obama and Emanuel want at this point, this close to the general election, is the public focusing on Chicago and the corruption of public sector unions.







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Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Look For The Union Label



(H/T Bubba Knows)

In 2009, Obama did away with the DC voucher program that allowed poor children in DC to received the same education as his, Obama's, children. Obama did so because the public sector unions, and in particular, teachers' unions, complained. And indeed, it is those public sector unions that form the economic foundation of today's Democrat Party. And yet, a substantial portion of the Democratic base consider the state of education in inner cities to be the biggest civil rights issue still extant. This issue should be second only to Obamacare for Republicans. Speaker Boehner, to his credit, is keeping the issue alive. Everyone else on the right seems to be yawning.






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Monday, January 16, 2012

MLK Day 2012: The Civil Rights Movement, The Left & The Legacy of MLK

Happy Martin Luther King Day.

The third Monday in January is annually set aside to honor the most towering figure of our nation's civil right's movement. And his most eloquent speech was given in 1963, I Have A Dream. That speech was a stirring call for true equality. After opening by noting the promise of our nation, that "all men are created equal," near his conclusion, he said: "I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”

The full speech is in the video below. Do watch it. His moving appeal to equality as the basis for our nation rings as true today as in 1963.



And there is this via Hot Air today from MLK's niece, Dr. Alveda King who asserts in the interview below that had her uncle lived to see today, he’d be considered a pro-life, social conservative.



What follows is reposted and updated from 2008:

(2011 Update) Three years ago, I wrote a post on race in America, surveying our history and pointing out the far left's bastardization of MLK's dream of equality for all. It is appropriate to revisit that post today. I predicted at the time that, with the election of Obama, we would fall ever deeper, and perhaps irrevocably, into identity politics and multiculturalism, moving ever farther away from realizing MLK's goal of equality. I was wrong:
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Liberal African American NYT columnist Bob Herbert recently had this to say in extolling the virtues of the left:

Without the many great and noble deeds of liberals over the past six or seven decades, America would hardly be recognizable to today’s young people. Liberals (including liberal Republicans, who have since been mostly drummed out of the party) ended legalized racial segregation and gender discrimination.

Mr. Herbert pretty much sums up what has been the far left / liberal / progressive line for decades. But then how to explain all the vicious, ad hominem and unhinged Palin-bashing coming from the left? To take it one further, how to reconcile that Palin-bashing with the left's acceptance of people like Rev. Jeremiah Wright as a part of their stable? It seems quite the conundrum unless one knows a bit of history and can identify the massive deceits. Here are some facts, some of which you might not be aware:

- The Republican Party - the party of Abraham Lincoln - was borne in 1854 out of opposition to slavery.

- The party of Jim Crow and the Ku Klux Klan was, as Jeffrey Lord points out in an article at the WSJ, the Democratic Party. And Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) [was the last] member of the Senate who was once a member of the KKK.

- The 13th (abolishing slavery), 14th (due process for all citizens) and 15th (voting rights cannot be restriced on the basis of race) Amendments to the Constitution were enacted by Republicans over Democratic opposition.

- The NAACP was founded in 1909 by three white Republicans who opposed the racist practices of the Democratic Party and the lynching of blacks by Democrats.

- In fairness, it was the Democrat Harry Truman who, by Executive Order 9981 issued in 1948, desegregated the military. That was a truly major development. My own belief is that the military has been the single greatest driving force of integration in this land for over half a century.

- It was Chief Justice Earl Warren, a former Republican Governor of California appointed to the Supreme Court by President Eisenhower, also a Republican, who managed to convince the other eight justices to agree to a unanimous decision in the seminal case of Brown v. Board of Education. That case was brought by the NAACP. The Court held segregation in schools unconstitutional. The fact that it was a unanimous decision that overturned precedent made it clear that no aspect of segregation would henceforth be considered constitutional.

- Republican President Ike Eisenhower played additional important roles in furthering equality in America. He "proposed to Congress the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1960 and signed those acts into law. . . . They constituted the first significant civil rights acts since the 1870s." Moreover, when the Democratic Governor of Arkansas refused to integrate schools in what became known as the "Little Rock Nine" incident, "Eisenhower placed the Arkansas National Guard under Federal control and sent Army troops to escort nine black students into an all-white public school."

- The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was championed by JFK - but it was passed with massive Republican support (over 80%) in Congress and over fierce opposition from Democrats who made repeated attempts at filibuster. Indeed, 80% of the vote opposing the Civil Rights Act came from Democrats. Women were added to the Act as a protected class by a Democrat who thought it would be a poison pill, killing the legislation. To the contrary, the Congress passed the Act without any attempt to remove the provision.

- Martin Luther King Jr. was the most well known and pivotal Civil Rights activist ever produced in America. His most famous speech, "I Had A Dream," was an eloquent and stirring call for equality. If you have not read the speech or heard it, you can find it here. I would highly recommend listening to it. Rev. King was, by the way, a Republican.

- "Bull" Connor was not a Republican. . . .

Nothing that I say here is to suggest that racism and sexism could not be found in the Republican party or among conservatives at any point in American history. But if you take any period in history and draw a line at the midpoint of racist and sexist attitudes, you would find far more Republicans than Democrats on the lesser side of that line. And you would find a much greater willingness on the part of Republicans, relative to the time, to effectuate equality. That was as true in 1865 as in 1965 - and in 2008.

Sometime about 1968, the far left movement emerged as a major wing of the Democratic Party. This far left wing hijacked the civil rights movement and made it, ostensibly, their raison d'etre. Gradually, the far left has grown until it is now the dominant force in Democratic politics. JFK, Truman and FDR would recognize precious little of today's Democratic Party.

The far left fundamentally altered the nature of the Civil Rights movement when they claimed it as their own. They imprinted the movement with identity politics, grossly distorting the movement's goal of a level playing field for all Americans and creating in its stead a Marxist world of permanent victimized classes entitled to special treatment. The far left has been the driver of reverse racism and sexism for the past half century. That is why it is no surprise that, with the emergence of a far left candidate for the highest office in the nation, Rev. Jeremiah Wright should also arise at his side and into the public eye preaching a vile racism and separatism most Americans thought long dead in this country. Nor is it any surprise that the MSM, many of whom are of the far left, should collectively yawn at Obama's twenty year association with Wright. Wright is anything but an anomaly. To the contrary, he is a progeny of the politics of the far left.

The far left did not merely hijack the civil rights movement, they also wrote over a century of American history, turning it on its head. That is why Bob Herbert, quoted above, is able to wax so eloquently while spouting the most horrendous of deceits. The far left managed to paint the conservative movement and the Republican Party as the prime repositories of racism and sexism. The far left has long held themselves out as the true party of equality. They have done so falsely as, by its very nature, identity politics cements inequality. Beyond that truism, the far left has for decades played the race and gender cards to counter any criticism of their policies, to forestall any reasoned debate and to demonize those who stand opposed to them. They continue to do so through this very day.

For example, Obama has attempted repeatedly to play the race card so as to delegitimize criticism of his policies. And today we have the Governor of New York calling the McCain camp racist for belittling the executive experience one could expect to be gleaned from the position of "community organizer." Apparently, according to Gov. David Patterson, "repeated use of the words 'community organizer' is Republican code for 'black'." What Gov. Patterson is doing is the well worn trick of taking any criticism of something pertaining to one of the victim class and recasting it as an illegitimate attack on the victim class itself. These tactics, which the left has used with incredible effectiveness in the past, have done incalculable harm to our nation over the decades.

We are either a melting pot wherein "all men are created equal" - the ideal of our Founders for which we have long laboured and are ever closer to succeeding - or we are to become a multicultural nation of pigeon-holed special interests. We are to become a nation where groups are encouraged to remain apart, defining themselves by their victim class before defining themselves as Americans. Multiculturalism is unworkable - we can see it destroying Europe and Britain - but that has not stopped the far left in America from their embrace of the concept. Nor has it slowed their efforts to weave multiculturalism irrevocably into the fabric of our society.

The far left has long pushed forward minorities and women to prove that they are the party of inclusiveness. On the right, the process has been slower. You had the percolation of minorities and women to major positions through the natural process of time and selection of the fittest. Only the most jaded would ever argue that Colin Powell and Condi Rice did not earn their positions solely on merit. And love her or hate her, Kristi Todd Whitman was both well qualified and a very good governor.

I have long been waiting for a self-made and accomplished woman or minority to rise to the very top in Republican politics. It is something that would intrinsically expose the incredibly damaging canard that the far left has pushed for near half a century. I had hoped Colin Powell would be that man a decade ago. As to Condi Rice, had things worked out differently for the Bush administration and had she not selected the Sec. of State slot (a killer for anyone with Pres. aspirations) I thought that perhaps she would have a good shot at running in 2008. I've been waiting for Thomas Sowell to run for any elected office for decades - and yes, I would consider him for beatification. These are people for whom neither their skin color nor their gender makes them a victim. These are people for whom what unites us in common as Americans is more important than what divides us into sub-groups. And these are people who earned their success by virtue of their excellence rather than the distortions of identity politics.

It is inevitable that one of the two concepts I earlier described - a melting pot of equals or a multicultural morass of victim groups - will gain ascendance in America. I have long felt that we are at a crossroads in our nation for precisely this reason, and that the ramifications of how we decide this issue will be existential. . . .
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When I wrote this post, I thought that electing Obama would take our nation irrevocably down the multicultural path, strengthening in America the victim class mentality that defines the left. I did not count on the rise of the Tea Party, nor that the left would go all out with the race card in a concerted and transparent attempt to delegitimize the message of that grass roots movement. Instead of strengthening the victim class mentality, all indications are that it has had a contrary effect, exposing the device to much of America. It is a tremendous irony that Obama, a man whose promise to lead us to racial equality was always without the barest hint of substance, may well inadvertently lead us to that promised land regardless. As the race card loses its ability to stigmatize the far left's political opponents, it spells the beginning of the end to the victim politics of the left. When the last vestiges of its toxin are banished from our land, then will come the day MLK's dream is fulfilled, and all of our children will "live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."

Update (2011): NiceDeb has a round-up of MLK posts, linking not only to this post, but also to a fine post by Michelle Malkin, asking the left to give the race card a rest on MLK Day. In it, Malkin provides an exhaustive list of the times the left has used the race card in the recent past, concluding with an essay from Jerome Hudson that appears at Human Events:

Like most Americans, I’ve had enough with this administration’s policies. I was fed up and fired up.

I am even more so in the wake of the most moving gathering I’ve ever been privileged to be a part of.

At one point, some of the people attending the Rev. Al Sharpton’s “counter rally,” coined “Reclaiming King,” stopped me. I guess they must have been judging me by the color of my skin not the content of my character, because they asked if I was going to come join them.

“No, I won’t be there,” I told them. “Why?” one of them asked with a grimace on his face. I looked at him and said, “I want to be where the Lord is and the Lord is in this place.”

One of the older black women in the group asked me if I felt like I was “selling out” for being one of the “tokens” in the Beck rally crowd?

I laughed and said “Ma’am, Al Sharpton is a pretender. He is going to tell you to pretend that the color of your skin matters. He is going to ask you to ignore the now overwhelming proof that 50 years after the Civil Rights movement, blacks are now destroying each other faster than the KKK could have dreamed.”

As I walked away, the group stood frozen, not knowing how to reply.

Later, as Sharpton preached a divisive message void of actual solutions on how to “close the education and economic gap” in the “black community,” Dr. Alveda King, Martin Luther King’s niece, invoked the spirit of her slain uncle proclaiming, “I too have a dream, that white privilege will become human privilege and that people of every ethnic blend will receive everyone as brothers and sisters in the love of God.”

Her comments on restoring the “foundation of the family” in America were met, not with boos, but with a thunderous applause.

(What bigots those white folks! Having the audacity to cheer Dr. King’s niece like that. Racists the whole lot of them!)

I was probably the only 24-year old black college student in the crowd. It’s hard to know, because we had over 300,000 people there. But that didn’t matter to me. As we all stood hand-in-hand, American shoulder to American shoulder, our myriad faces streaked with tears as we sang “Amazing Grace.” It was a moment I will be proud to tell my grandkids about one day.

What that moment taught me is this: Something profound is happening in America that runs far deeper than politics. The ground is shifting, and it’s in freedom’s direction.

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Update 2012:  It is a tragedy that the goal of MLK, a society where people are "measured by the content of their character and not the color of their skin," has been so distorted and hollowed out to be used as a political tool by the left. All of the most prominent voices of the black civil rights movement today - Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, etc. - invariably seem to be doing far more for themselves than for blacks as a group. Indeed, for but one example, there is Prof. Henry L. Gates who has made an entire, extremely well paying career at Harvard out of arguing for reparations from all whites to all blacks for the original sin of slavery in America. And as I pointed out in a post a few days ago, in taking stock of what the Civil Rights Movement and the Obama administration have achieved through today:

. . . Blacks should be waking up to a hard lesson - that the left wing promises sold to them, the separatism and victimhood, they are all empty. And on the two most important issues facing blacks today, jobs and education, their best hopes lay with the right.

. . . The black middle class has been growing steadily since 1955. But that middle class is under full frontal assault from Obama. According to the Economic Policy Institute, quoted in the Chicago Sun Times, the median net worth for black families has plunged 83% under Obama. Black unemployment has risen to 16.2%, and only 56.9% of black men over the age of 20 remain in today's workforce. According to the Censsus Bureau, the poverty rate for black households in America today is at a staggering 27.4%. As the Sun-Timessummed this up:

Millions of Americans endured financial calamities in the recession. But for many in the black community, job loss has knocked them out of the middle class and back into poverty. And some experts warn of a historic reversal of hard-won economic gains that took black people decades to achieve.

“History is going to say the black middle class was decimated” over the past few years, said Maya Wiley, director of the Center for Social Inclusion. “But we’re not done writing history.”

Adds Algernon Austin, director of the Economic Policy Institute’s Program on Race, Ethnicity and the Economy: “The recession is not over for black folks.”

And indeed, it should be noted that Obama's most recent decision to decimate Army ranks will likewise severely restrict another historic avenue for black advancement to the middle class. In the Army, 27.7% of the enlisted ranks are filled by blacks.

[The second way in which the modern civil rights movements has wholly failed the black community is in education, and particularly] the horrid state of public education in the inner cities. Is is, as Juan Williams has called it from the left, "the key civil rights issue of this generation." And as Thomas Sowell has opined from the right, "Republicans have a golden opportunity to go after the votes of black parents by connecting the dots and exposing one of the key reasons for bad education in inner cities and the bad consequences that follow.."

Both Williams and Sowell also agree that the single biggest hurdle to improving education in the inner cities is the power of teachers' unions. The left stands shoulder to shoulder with all public sector unions - teachers' unions in particular - because they provide much of the economic base for Democrats. And indeed, Exhibit one in trying to win the black vote on this issue is Obama who, at the start of his administration, ended the DC voucher program for DC's inner city youth, while at the same time he enrolled his children in the area's best private school.

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

All Of The Stars Align - Time For Republicans To Court The Black Vote


. . . One of the things that is long overdue is some Republican re-thinking — or perhaps thinking for the first time — about the approach that they have been using, with consistently disastrous results, for trying to get the black vote.

The black vote was once consistently Republican, from the time of Abraham Lincoln to Herbert Hoover. Even after Franklin D. Roosevelt won over the black vote to the Democrats, it was not considered remarkable when Eisenhower got a higher share of the black vote than any Republican president in recent times has.

It may be years before Republicans can again get a majority of the black vote. But Republicans don’t need to get a majority of the black vote. If they get 20 percent of the black vote, the Democrats are in trouble — and if they get 30 percent, the Democrats have had it in the general elections.

Thomas Sowell, How Republicans Can Win The Black Vote, NRO, 22 Jan. 2010

One of the great travesties of the past half century has been how the far left has fully sewn up the black vote. It was LBJ's championing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - over the objection on Constitutional grounds of Barry Goldwater - that cemented the black vote for Democrats. Since then, blacks have regularly voted near 90% for Democrats.

The Democrats have been able to accomplish this by treating the blacks as servile victims permanently entitled to special treatment. Democrats substituted a brand of soft racism for the hard racism that was historically the hallmark of their party. And as we see today, that faustian bargain has worked out much better for the hard left than it has for blacks in our society.

But that house of cards is crumbling before our very eyes. Quite literally, all of the stars are aligned for conservatives to make a real push for the black vote. Blacks should be waking up to a hard lesson - that the left wing promises sold to them, the separatism and victimhood, they are all empty. And on the two most important issues facing blacks today, jobs and education, their best hopes lay with the right.

The first star in alignment is jobs. The black middle class has been growing steadily since 1955. But that middle class is under full frontal assault from Obama. According to the Economic Policy Institute, quoted in the Chicago Sun Times, the median net worth for black families has plunged 83% under Obama. Black unemployment has risen to 16.2%, and only 56.9% of black men over the age of 20 remain in today's workforce. According to the Censsus Bureau, the poverty rate for black households in America today is at a staggering 27.4%. As the Sun-Times summed this up:

Millions of Americans endured financial calamities in the recession. But for many in the black community, job loss has knocked them out of the middle class and back into poverty. And some experts warn of a historic reversal of hard-won economic gains that took black people decades to achieve.

“History is going to say the black middle class was decimated” over the past few years, said Maya Wiley, director of the Center for Social Inclusion. “But we’re not done writing history.”

Adds Algernon Austin, director of the Economic Policy Institute’s Program on Race, Ethnicity and the Economy: “The recession is not over for black folks.”

And indeed, it should be noted that Obama's most recent decision to decimate Army ranks will likewise severely restrict another historic avenue for black advancement to the middle class. In the Army, 27.7% of the enlisted ranks are filled by blacks.

The second star in alignment is the horrid state of public education in the inner cities. Is is, as Juan Williams has called it from the left, "the key civil rights issue of this generation." And as Thomas Sowell has opined from the right, "Republicans have a golden opportunity to go after the votes of black parents by connecting the dots and exposing one of the key reasons for bad education in inner cities and the bad consequences that follow.."

Both Williams and Sowell also agree that the single biggest hurdle to improving education in the inner cities is the power of teachers' unions. The left stands shoulder to shoulder with all public sector unions - teachers' unions in particular - because they provide much of the economic base for Democrats. And indeed, Exhibit one in trying to win the black vote on this issue is Obama who, at the start of his administration, ended the DC voucher program for DC's inner city youth, while at the same time he enrolled his children in the area's best private school.

Then there is the third star in alignment. Black Republicans are starting to gain a wide voice. When groups like the Black Caucus or the NAACP play the race card now, there are black conservatives like LTC Alen West to respond. And the message of West and his ilk to their fellow blacks is quite literally to runaway from the Democratic plantation.



And finally, the last star in alignment is the race card. There was a time when throwing the race card ended all debate, sending the one whom the card was aimed at ducking and running for cover. For a host of reasons, that is no longer true today. The race card is near bankrupt - though that won't stop the hard left from playing it while there is still any life in their bodies. The race card has been the key to their rise to power. Its bankruptcy spells their death knell. Indeed, expect the race card to fly fast and furious when Republicans seriously vie for the black vote.

For their part, as Republicans vie for the black vote, they must heed the warning of Dr. Thomas Sowell:

There is no point today in Republicans’ continuing to try to win over the average black voter by acting like imitation Democrats. Those who like what the Democrats are doing are going to vote for real Democrats.

Indeed, in the current climate, there is no reason to pretend to be anything other than a conservative Republican when addressing the black community.

It is doubtful that we will ever see again the stars aligned so favorably for breaking the Democrat's stranglehold on the black vote. But according to people close to the issue, it would appear that there is virtually no top down attempt being made by the Republican Party to court the black vote. This from PJM:

Timothy Johnson is the chairman and founder of the Frederick Douglass Foundation. He is less than impressed with the Republican Party’s outreach efforts: I’m a past party official, so I can speak from in house party politics. The short answer is the party sucks at it. That’s the bottom line. The party when it comes down to the black community is doing a terrible job, and is still doing a terrible job. Johnson said that the GOP may have done a little better under the leadership of Michael Steele, but the current leadership has simply given up on getting black votes:

I have candidates who are honest with me and they say, “Tim, I’ve had people tell me ‘Don’t worry about the black community.’” That pisses me off. When they are honest with me and say, ‘Tim, we’ve been told, ‘Don’t worry about going to the black community, they’re not going to vote for you anyway,’” that’s a bold faced lie. You don’t know who I’m going to vote for. I’m an American.

That is just unforgivable. The opportunity is here for a long term shift in the political calculus in favor of the right and very much for the betterment of black Americans as a whole. It just remains to be taken like the low hanging fruit that it is.

Update: Linked at Larwyn's Linx and What Bubba Knows. Thanks all.

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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Assessing The Impact Of The Public Sector Union Full Employment Act 0f 2009

Actually, the above title is what the Stimulus should have been named, as that was clearly its purpose. Of the $787 billion funds spent in the Stimulus, only 2.6% of it went to address small businesses. The majority of the rest went to states. The left apparently believed that the private sector would bounce back on its own, and in the meantime, they wanted to keep their power base fully employed and sending dues to the Democrat's cash cow, pulbic sector unions. It was a huge error in judgment that has left us teeting on economic catastrophe. Within eight months, by 1 January, 2010, the private sector had hemmoraged 7.3 million jobs. The public sector, on the other hand, had lost only 100,000 jobs.

Recently, two economists delved deeper into the impact of the Stimulus on states and public sector / private sector employment near 30 months on. Their study, "The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act: Public Sector Jobs Saved, Private Sector Jobs Forestalled," provides in-depth evidence for the same conclusions I pointed to in the paragraph above. It makes for interesting - and damning - reading:

Our benchmark results suggest that the ARRA created/saved approximately 450 thousand state and local government jobs and destroyed/forestalled roughly one million private sector jobs. State and local government jobs were saved because ARRA funds were largely used to offset state revenue shortfalls and Medicaid increases rather than boost private sector employment. The majority of destroyed/forestalled jobs were in growth industries including health, education, professional and business services.

(H/T Powerline)

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Friday, April 22, 2011

Boeing & Obama's War On The Free Markets In Support Of Unions

This from the NYT:

In what may be the strongest signal yet of the new pro-labor orientation of the National Labor Relations Board under President Obama, the agency filed a complaint Wednesday seeking to force Boeing to bring an airplane production line back to its unionized facilities in Washington State instead of moving the work to a nonunion plant in South Carolina.

In its complaint, the labor board said that Boeing’s decision to transfer a second production line for its new 787 Dreamliner passenger plane to South Carolina was motivated by an unlawful desire to retaliate against union workers for their past strikes in Washington and to discourage future strikes. The agency’s acting general counsel, Lafe Solomon, said it was illegal for companies to take actions in retaliation against workers for exercising the right to strike.

Although manufacturers have long moved plants to nonunion states, the board noted that Boeing officials had, in internal documents and news interviews, specifically cited the strikes and potential future strikes as a reason for their 2009 decision to expand in South Carolina.

Boeing said it would “vigorously contest” the labor board’s complaint. “This claim is legally frivolous and represents a radical departure from both N.L.R.B. and Supreme Court precedent,” said J. Michael Luttig, a Boeing executive vice president and its general counsel. “Boeing has every right under both federal law and its collective bargaining agreement to build additional U.S. production capacity outside of the Puget Sound region.”

It is highly unusual for the federal government to seek to reverse a corporate decision as important as the location of plant.

But ever since a Democratic majority took control of the five-member board after Mr. Obama’s election, the board has signaled that it would seek to adopt a more liberal, pro-union tilt after years of pro-employer decisions under President Bush. . . .

This is such a vast overreach by Labor and its cronies in the Obama administration - it is such a fundamental attack on capitalism - it is difficult to know where to begin. As a threshold matter, the anti-retaliation provisions of the NLRA protect individuals from being fired or demoted for their union activities. The Obama radicals on the NLRB now seek to vastly expand the scope of those provisions to a point that corporations would become captives of unionized, closed shop states.

Unions are an anachronism of the communist movement near two centuries old - which itself was a response to inequities that arose early in the Industrial Age, something that has long been consigned to the history books. There is a reason unions are drastically declining in the private sector in the U.S.. They do not make economic sense in an age of vast national wealth where competition for labor and the mobility of labor insures that laborers will be able to receive fair market value.

It is beyond any form of contention that, where unions exist, the end product is at best, substantially more expensive than that produced by non-union labor, such as with automakers, or in the worst case, substantially lessens the quality of the service being delivered, as is the case with teachers unions and public education. Further, the reality is that in "closed shop" states, unions create a form of indentured servitude, where to even work in a desired field, a laborer must pay a union for the privilege. The laborer then has no say in how the union uses those dues. Whatever justification for unions existed in 1848, when Marx, in the Communist Manifesto, described unions as the building blocks of his Communist utopia, those justifications do not exist in America today.

The only thing that can possibly save private sector unions in the U.S. is the point of the gun by the government. And indeed, that is what we are seeing today with Obama's NLRB outrageously trying to use the police power of our government to force Boeing to keep all production in Washington.

The only reason unions still exist in America, both public sector and private sector, is that they are economic base of the Democratic party. It is hard to think of a more corrupt or malign situation. When the administrations change in 2012, it is time to go to war on unions - outlawing public sector unions and changing the rules for private sector unions. No place in America should be subject to a "closed shop," the U.S. government should never favor unions in its contracting, and the NLRB should be disbanded.

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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

For The Children? Really?

There is no greater impediment to quality education in America than public sector teachers' unions. Their interest is in money and power, not educating America's youth. These unions protect public education as a monopoly regardless of results. These unions protect the jobs of dues paying members irrespective of their competence. These unions constantly stump for more tax payer dollars to be funnelled through education for their own benefit. As noted repeatedly on this blog, nationally, we have more than doubled educational spending per pupil in real dollars over the past four decades while reading scores have remained stagnant and math and science scores have declined precipitously.

But what about Wisconsin, where education spending is 12th highest in the nation and the teachers' union is demanding that Gov. Walker's plan to limit collective bargaining be defeated "for the children?" This from CNS News:

Two-thirds of the eighth graders in Wisconsin public schools cannot read proficiently according to the U.S. Department of Education, despite the fact that Wisconsin spends more per pupil in its public schools than any other state in the Midwest.

In the National Assessment of Educational Progress tests administered by the U.S. Department of Education in 2009—the latest year available—only 32 percent of Wisconsin public-school eighth graders earned a “proficient” rating while another 2 percent earned an “advanced” rating. The other 66 percent of Wisconsin public-school eighth graders earned ratings below “proficient,” including 44 percent who earned a rating of “basic” and 22 percent who earned a rating of “below basic.”

The test also showed that the reading abilities of Wisconsin public-school eighth graders had not improved at all between 1998 and 2009 despite a significant inflation-adjusted increase in the amount of money Wisconsin public schools spent per pupil each year.

. . . [F]rom 1998 to 2008, Wisconsin public schools increased their per pupil spending by $4,245 in real terms yet did not add a single point to the reading scores of their eighth graders and still could lift only one-third of their eighth graders to at least a “proficient” level in reading. . . .

In fiscal 2008, the federal government provided $669.6 million in subsidies to the public schools in Wisconsin.

In a marketplace with competition, institutions showing results this poor would soon go bankrupt. Yet Wisconsin's teachers' union wants us to side with them "for the children." I hope there is a special place in hell reserved just for them.

What the unions are doing in Wisconsin has nothing whatsoever to do with benefits "for the children" and everything to do with money and power. What Obama and the DNC are doing in Wisconsin likewise has nothing to do with benefiting children and everything to do with preserving their most lucrative constituency - public sector union employees. George Will, surveying the events in Wisconsin today, inferred three lessons:

First, the Democratic Party is the party of government, not only because of its extravagant sense of government's competence and proper scope, but also because the party's base is government employees. Second, government employees have an increasingly adversarial relationship with the governed. Third, Obama's "move to the center" is fictitious.

Related Posts:


1. Public Sector Unions: A Toxin, A Crisis & An Opportunity
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