Protests in Wisconsin - Scott Walker

Besides that, the state has promised to earn 7.8% yearly on that pension money. Where do you suppose the money will come from if Wisconsin is unable to attain a perpetual 7.8% rate of return? Is it really "fully funded"?
 
Besides that, the state has promised to earn 7.8% yearly on that pension money. Where do you suppose the money will come from if Wisconsin is unable to attain a perpetual 7.8% rate of return? Is it really "fully funded"?
That's exactly it, Wisconsin claims it's fully funded because they are putting enough into it assuming a 7.8% annual rate of return. However, if they invested conservatively (but safely) they'd be short by $45 billion.

They say no problem, because they have averaged 10.2% simce 1982, of course that includes the high inflation years of the early 80s and the boom years of the 90s. I doubt it's done nearly as well the last 10 years. No private pension fund would be allowed to assume a 7.8% rate, but public pensions are exempt from those laws.
 
So, privatize the funds, the money is already in there. But the main problem is unions supporting democrats in elections. This is the funding Walker really wants to stop.
 
So, privatize the funds, the money is already in there.
No, it's not. If this were a private pension plan it would need far more funding, the current levels are not nearly adequate and in fact the managers of such a fund in private practice would be in violation of the law.
 
I hesitated to post at all to this thread. I pretty well understand that most JREF posters will have pretty much knee jerk reactions to this kind of story and we will favor one side of the other regardless of the discussion.

I thought what Skeptic Ginger posted here was relevant to this:
There's a divide between rich and poor. One might argue if the cut off is the top 1% of wealth owners or income earners, or the top 5%. But if you are in the bottom 80% you are probably on the side of the little guy. If you are in the bottom 60% you most definitely are.
I think most people that have her view of the world think something very similar to this. In the context of this thread she was implying that being on the side of the "little guy" was being on the side of the unions in this dispute. This belief is so deeply ingrained that I think it has become essentially an unfalsifiable view. People either because of their self interest or just through constant repetition of the mantra about how important unions are to the worker come to believe to a near certainty that their pro-union ideas favor the "little guy".

They held on to this belief even while they watched Detroit crumbling into the ground as the substantially above market wages drove car manufacturing out of the city. Of course, they come up with all sorts of rationalizations for the disaster that their ideas impose on people, "little guy" or not but they never confront the idea that government special interest union legislation is an economically unsound approach to helping the "little guy".

In the case of Wisconsin and in the case of a lot of other states and municipalities unions have driven wages and benefits substantially above market. This is, of course, in the short term good for the "little guys" that the pro-union folks focus on, the people in the unions that have the jobs. But do they ever give a thought to the fact that the high wages come at the expense of taking more money out of the economy thereby reducing the wages and benefits for the people that compete in the free market? Do they give much thought to the problem that the driving force for getting out of a recession is the reduction in prices and wages leads to more hiring, spending and eventually increased economic efficiencies and are a net benefit to everybody. I don't think they do. They focus on the fact that the "little people" they think about are being harmed by their reduction in wages and benefits without thinking for a minute about the millions of other people that are making similar sacrifices imposed on them by the need to face economic realities.

My guess, is that this post will not change one person's mind about all this. One of the deeply held views of standard Democratic Party ideology is that markets can be manipulated without unintended consequences. Rents are too high, pass a law that limits them. Farm prices are too low, pass a law that sets them artificially high. Wages are too low, pass a law that sets them above market. All these strategies are always done in the name of the "little guy" and the people that fight for them just are not open to the idea that their cherished notions have unintended consequences that outweigh the benefits.
 
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I hesitated to post at all to this thread. I pretty well understand that most JREF posters will have pretty much knee jerk reactions to this kind of story and we will favor one side of the other regardless of the discussion.

I thought what Skeptic Ginger posted here was relevant to this:
I think most people that have her view of the world think something very similar to this. In the context of this thread she was implying that being on the side of the "little guy" was being on the side of the unions in this dispute. This belief is so deeply ingrained that I think it has become essentially an unfalsifiable view. People either because of their self interest or just through constant repetition of the mantra about how important unions are to the worker come to believe to a near certainty that their pro-union ideas favor the "little guy".

They held on to this belief even while they watched Detroit crumbling into the ground as the substantially above market wages drove car manufacturing out of the city. Of course, they come up with all sorts of rationalizations for the disaster that their ideas impose on people, "little guy" or not but they never confront the idea that government special interest union legislation is an economically unsound approach to helping the "little guy".

In the case of Wisconsin and in the case of a lot of other states and municipalities unions have driven wages and benefits substantially above market.

Total bull flops. Detroit didn't go septic because production workers made too much. Management and shareholders made too much money and couldn't see their way clear to put enough money back into infrastructure and design and make good cars.

As for wages being artificially above market, there is something wrong with the market rate for labor if a single worker employed full time can't support a wife and one or two children. Don't give me any crap about how they should not expect to. They did just fine back when CEOs made about 35X what a janitor made and the top tax rate was waaaaaaay higher than 35%.

It is the wish of the capitalists to earn too much, not the desire of the proletariate to earn enough that has screwed us all.
 
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Total bull flops. Detroit didn't go septic because production workers made too much. Management and shareholders made too much money and couldn't see their way clear to put enough money back into infrastructure and design and make good cars.

As for wages being artificially above market, there is something wrong with the market rate for labor if a single worker employed full time can't support a wife and one or two children. Don't give me any crap about how they should not expect to. They did just fine back when CEOs made about 35X what a janitor made and the top tax rate was waaaaaaay higher than 35%.

It is the wish of the capitalists to earn too much, not the desire of the proletariate to earn enough that has screwed us all.

It's really not hard to support a wife and two kids on 30k a year. Just don't expect to buy filet mignon for every meal, buy the brand new tv every year and find cheaper ways to drive. Maybe you'll be a one car family.

Oh noes.
 
*Note, this post is t l. So I've bolded a couple sentences to facilitate the skim reader, not because I'm trying to shout or because I think anyone isn't reading previous points I've posted.

I hesitated to post at all to this thread. I pretty well understand that most JREF posters will have pretty much knee jerk reactions to this kind of story and we will favor one side of the other regardless of the discussion.

I thought what Skeptic Ginger posted here was relevant to this:
I think most people that have her view of the world think something very similar to this. In the context of this thread she was implying that being on the side of the "little guy" was being on the side of the unions in this dispute. This belief is so deeply ingrained that I think it has become essentially an unfalsifiable view. People either because of their self interest or just through constant repetition of the mantra about how important unions are to the worker come to believe to a near certainty that their pro-union ideas favor the "little guy".

They held on to this belief even while they watched Detroit crumbling into the ground as the substantially above market wages drove car manufacturing out of the city. Of course, they come up with all sorts of rationalizations for the disaster that their ideas impose on people, "little guy" or not but they never confront the idea that government special interest union legislation is an economically unsound approach to helping the "little guy".
First, I was talking about who was in the rich and who was in the poor categories when one talks about things that benefit one group or the other, not which political side people were on. Clearly if income made one a Progressive or Conservative, we wouldn't be having this discussion. The majority would vote in their own best interest instead of voting in the best interest of the people who have the money to control the message and influence the legislators who do get elected. Looking back, I wasn't very clear how I said that.


Moving on, let's see if you are as willing to take a serious look at your own beliefs as you hope we might be in looking at yours.

Your claim, the unions are the root of financial failure of any company, assumes an underlying premise I doubt you could support. You are claiming the workers are incompetent when it comes to understanding the marketplace. You are claiming they are too stupid or poorly informed as to the effect of their wages on the company.

I give most workers more credit than you apparently give them. Typically when workers see the company's profits increase and their wages stagnant, workers want more compensation. If employees see the company is losing money, especially when they see a company is threatened with going out of business, you'll see employees agreeing to serious wage and benefit cuts. WORKERS ARE NOT STUPID.

Of course the stockholders and company owners feel they own the company and they should reap as much profit as the market will bear. They often don't see the employees as people, only as a cost of goods sold with unions being a thorn in the company's side.

But workers OWN THEIR SKILLS as well.

So what about labor monopolies? We don't want suppliers colluding to increase the price of goods sold. Most people recognize monopolies inhibit the good market force of competition. (A few people argue monopolies die on their own, I don't agree, but that's another issue.) Labor monopolies don't work the same as supplier monopolies and you among other people are making the mistake of believing they do.

Workers can only take a share of profits. You imagine they take more than what's in the profit pool driving the company out of business. But that means they'd lose their jobs. You believe workers are too stupid to recognize that. I know for a fact union workers are not stupid. And if you look at the history of unions such as Boeing workers (I use this example because I've seen all their disputes and strikes in the news for the last 30 years) they ask for more when company profits go up, they agree to less when company sales are down.

Supplier monopolies are also subject to charging what the market will bear. Where the problem arises is when suppliers are selling the public things the public cannot forego. Now the monopoly of the Telcom and the oil giant can severely impact people's lives, not just their consumer choices.

By the same token, employers with only a few exceptions, have an unequal advantage over workers. That is not a guess or a philosophy, history is full of examples of what fate workers can expect without unions to level the playing field.


So what about your claim that the troubled car manufacturers provides an example where unions demanding higher wages resulted in the cost of labor making the cost of American brand cars uncompetitive. Doesn't history also support that conclusion? Well it's a cherry picked or oversimplified view of the problem.

You have to broaden your view to include other compounding variables. Look, for example, at the contribution to the outcome of American workers increasingly competing with global workers. If one took your premise (I don't, but say I did) then autoworkers would have to accept lower and lower wages until they earned as little as workers in India and China. Considering that the cost of living differs, auto workers would be in abject poverty. That's not a tenable outcome. Nor is it fair to blame unions for an outcome without considering the part inevitable globalization is contributing to a company becoming uncompetitive.

We cannot stop the world from becoming more and more interconnected. We have to change with the world.


Second, you may be blaming the employees for poor management decisions. The quality of the cars had a lot to do with my choice to buy foreign 'brand' cars, not the cost. Now that Toyota has been troubled by quality issues, American brands have a chance to take a bigger market share.

Then there is the management decision to push big gas guzzlers and go for that target market. Gas prices went up, people wanted smaller cars. That had nothing to do with price or union wages. As soon as gas prices went down, out came the gas guzzling promos all over again. Management decisions to resist fuel efficiency standards, IMO, is poor long term management.

Safety is another issue. In crash test scores American brands have trailed foreign car brands like Subaru and Volvo. I'm not an expert in the auto market. Clearly Americans have an ongoing love affair with big cars. But for myself as a car consumer, I want a smaller, fuel efficient, safe car. And I was buying a new car every couple years. I didn't buy a new one as usual 2 years ago because the 2009 Subaru Outback was re-designed into a big SUV. So I'm hanging on to my old one because there isn't a better choice on the market. I may be in a small market share, in the short term. I doubt I'm part of a small market in the long term.

The bottom line, management decisions and inevitable globalization are two variables you left out of your blame-union-wages conclusion. In addition, you have an unsupportable underlying premise in your conclusion that workers demands are divorced from the economic reality.


In the case of Wisconsin and in the case of a lot of other states and municipalities unions have driven wages and benefits substantially above market.
This 'fact' is contradicted in many sources.

This is, of course, in the short term good for the "little guys" that the pro-union folks focus on, the people in the unions that have the jobs. But do they ever give a thought to the fact that the high wages come at the expense of taking more money out of the economy thereby reducing the wages and benefits for the people that compete in the free market? Do they give much thought to the problem that the driving force for getting out of a recession is the reduction in prices and wages leads to more hiring, spending and eventually increased economic efficiencies and are a net benefit to everybody.
Oh the irony. More than a few very good economists agree with me, we will set the recovery back if we slow government investment in infrastructure and services, and in exchange all we get is lower taxes on the top 2% of the income earners.

Supposedly these upper income earners create jobs with that income. No they don't. I own a small business. If I paid wages to employees, that comes out of GROSS income. Income tax is based on NET income. Employee wages, unless you think the rich are going to fire their maids and gardeners, do not come out of the income which is taxed.


...I don't think they do. They focus on the fact that the "little people" they think about are being harmed by their reduction in wages and benefits without thinking for a minute about the millions of other people that are making similar sacrifices imposed on them by the need to face economic realities.
Whether it is a myth or Ford really believed it, the idea paying workers enough to afford what you produce has a basis in truth. If you want to slow the economy, squeeze the workers to the point they can no longer consume.

While the conservative claim is, it is taxes that are squeezing the workers, high taxes and government deficits didn't set the recession off, mortgage asset fraud by the banks did. One can believe the consumers getting their tax refunds will stimulate the economy. That's the philosophy the government is inefficient when it spends. History tells us public investment in infrastructure and services creates jobs. Tax breaks for the top income earners do not.

So unless you want to increase the tax on top income brackets and give other people more tax refunds to spend, giving people a little more money while cutting government funded jobs can only get you one step forward one step back.



You blame workers' wages and benefits for government deficits. I blame tax cuts for the wealthy, who don't need the cuts and aren't creating jobs with the money as the Repub Party line claims. There are corporations flush with cash. Where are the jobs?

Creating the demon government deficit, demon government size, the demon spending and the demon union wages and pensions is a very unfortunate and dangerous campaign platform. Look at your Repub legislators just recently refusing to stop massive oil company subsidies. Why isn't that the demon? Why is a 4% increase in the tax only on wages greater than $200,000 not the demon? Why isn't government investment in services and infrastructure seen as the economic stimulus history shows us it is?

This kind of stimulus is not the same as the bank bailouts.

IMO, the reason people believe in the wrong demons is because the false demons were created in a campaign to get Repubs back in office. Yes, that is an oversimplified answer. I have a longer one, but the post is already tl, dr.

IMy guess, is that this post will not change one person's mind about all this.
I'm going to be more optimistic. I think you are a reasonable, skilled critical thinker. I'm going to guess you might just consider a few variables you've been discounting. But I'll take that back if your reply just repeats your view without addressing what I've brought up.


One of the deeply held views of standard Democratic Party ideology is that markets can be manipulated without unintended consequences.
It's very unfortunate you believe this straw man. Belief in these stereotypes is a barrier to having a debate that gets to the real issues.

Of course, one could say the same about my statement on the Repub created demons they have based their campaign propaganda messages on. I'm willing to debate the real issues if they are presented with supporting evidence or examples. So for example, if you can show that it is realistic for union workers to compete with international labor costs, I'd be interested in how they should do that. If you have evidence it is the norm for unions to ignore economic realities when negotiating, I'd be interested in the specific evidence. I have lots of examples of unions taking pay and benefit cuts. (coughWisconsincough)


A little off topic but worth answering:
Rents are too high, pass a law that limits them.
Was Nixon a Democrat?

I'm pretty sure the Democratic Party approach would be to let the landlords charge what the market will bear and subsidize renters who would be homeless if they were not given assistance. In local markets like NYC, I don't know the specifics. Democrats are no less concerned about controlled rents resulting in less housing being available than Repubs are. Clearly the problem is very complex. You are wrong if you believe Progressive Democrats don't appreciate the market forces. That seems to be a theme in your post.

A related Democratic Party approach would also include regulating developers to include lower cost housing when building big developments. Yes, it's social engineering. I'm sure there are many people who don't like it. But there are many people who also see the benefit in not creating economically segregated neighborhoods. And there are more people who agree that city and urban planning is a legitimate function of local government, even if they don't agree with all the specifics. When a developer builds it impacts roads and schools outside of the development. It impacts the property values of people who have property adjacent to the development and so on.

We live in a community. Like it or not, we don't live in isolation from each other. Democrats, at least Progressive Democrats, recognize that little bit of reality. It's a straw man, however, to go from there to, Democrats are all socialists and communists.

Farm prices are too low, pass a law that sets them artificially high. Wages are too low, pass a law that sets them above market. All these strategies are always done in the name of the "little guy" and the people that fight for them just are not open to the idea that their cherished notions have unintended consequences that outweigh the benefits.
It's not the little guy that created the system of farm subsidies. It was the family farmer competing with the large corporate farmer that started it. But it is the large corporate farmer that now sustains it and benefits from it.
 
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It's really not hard to support a wife and two kids on 30k a year. Just don't expect to buy filet mignon for every meal, buy the brand new tv every year and find cheaper ways to drive. Maybe you'll be a one car family.

I live out in the boondocks and pay about $10K a year just in rent for a two-bedroom home. If I were on a bus run, it would be closer to $15K.

I'm a really good cook and still run about $120 a month for food for my wife and myself.

Utilities can vary. Not every home around here is up to standards for weather proofing. We have had some bloody awful cold winters. $520K is not much of a pad.
 
It's really not hard to support a wife and two kids on 30k a year. Just don't expect to buy filet mignon for every meal, buy the brand new tv every year and find cheaper ways to drive. Maybe you'll be a one car family.

Oh noes.

And maybe if the rich squeeze the worker even more, the downward cycle of fewer and fewer consumers with disposable income will continue. Oh yes.
 
I've thought a bit about how to reply to Skeptic Ginger's thoughtful post and I still am not sure that I have anything useful to say in a short enough time frame to make it interesting to anybody.

Let me start with this. I believe in the law of supply and demand with about the same degree of certainty that I believe in the law of gravity. That doesn't mean that it can be applied simplistically or there aren't various exceptions but on average and for most practical purposes the law of supply and demand is true. It is one of the principal mechanisms that underlies the capitalist system and the failure to understand the implications of it has led to some massive human disasters.

I can not explain the basis of my belief in the law of supply and demand quickly anymore than I can explain why I believe in evolution over creationism quickly. It is a belief structure based on years of observation and some study.

One of the implications of the law of supply and demand is that when workers have priced their wages substantially above free market wages and the entity they work for competes in the free market the entity will fail. In fact, there is pretty strong empirical evidence for that in the way the US has gradually moved away from unions. The sectors of the economy where the unions still hold power are also the sectors of the economy where free market competition is constrained or non-existent.

SG, envisions a world where without union protection workers are powerless and poor. The fact that the vast majority of the US is not unionized would seem to belie that, but when people believe in unions, an objective appraisal of that reality is not usually on the table.

One area, that I agree with SG on a bit, is that exactly market wages are not efficiency maximizing wages and that businesses have figured out the need to pay workers more than it seems they might to maximize their profits. I was mentioning my musing on this subject to my daughter who has a degree in economics and is in graduate school. Apparently this is a big topic in economist circles and she laid a few buzz words on me that I wish I had remembered so I could sound like I know something but alas I have forgotten them.

However, that is a far cry from believing that wages and benefits well above market benefit anybody except the people that get them. And this benefit is not some sort of violation of the no free lunch principle. Those wages come from someplace. Of course, a great many people think that they all come from some anonymous bunch of fat white guys that have too much money anyway. They don't actually. We are taxing the fat white guys at just about the revenue maximizing rates right now, so a whole lot of the above market wages and benefits come from middle class workers and entrepreneurs trying to get by.

And when the benefits paid to public service workers rise above a certain level, it is easy to imagine that a tipping point can be reached where businesses and workers are driven out of the districts where that is true. And when that happens the government needs to either raise taxes and drive more businesses and workers out of their jurisdiction, cut services, or cut benefits.

As a personal aside, based on some of SG's comments it seems that she might see me as some sort of partisan Republican. It is true that I am a registered Republican, but I have little doubt that Bush was the worst president of my life and Nixon was the most disgusting. I haven't voted for a Republican for national office for a number of years. I think Republicans are at least as irresponsible at running the government as Democrats. A huge portion of the economic problems the US faces today are due to the poor governance by the Republicans when they were in power. Republican pro-business ideas are largely crony driven and often anti-free market. It is interesting to me that the excesses of both parties make it so that successful long term governance by either one of them is impossible, but somehow we manage to muddle through when we have a little bit of each.

ETA: In the interest of full disclosure, I just remembered that I voted for Fiorina (the Republican candidate for senate in CA) over Boxer in the last election.
 
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I live out in the boondocks and pay about $10K a year just in rent for a two-bedroom home. If I were on a bus run, it would be closer to $15K.

I'm a really good cook and still run about $120 a month for food for my wife and myself.

Utilities can vary. Not every home around here is up to standards for weather proofing. We have had some bloody awful cold winters. $520K is not much of a pad.

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Edited for civility.


Were both college educated professionals. We make money. It might spite some Republicans but we aren't married. Is it okay with you, ole arbitrator of salaries that we can buy steak and lobster? My marinated steak quesadillas, bbq nachos and teriyaki wings are to die for. My lady, she sucks at cooking, I do it, were so progressive.

You have a $120 a month food budget? Of course your ashamed, anyone would be ashamed, but lashing out at others is not the answer. You can go to school, your wife could go to school. The issue isn't that a corporation has robbed you, it is that you haven't given them reason to pay you. After that, once you learn how to cook (actually cook) you could look into opening your own restaurant.

One of the stupidest common claims is that we as the money men bankers want to foreclose on you? Why would we? If you can't sell your property at profit why would you think we can? We almost always lose when we foreclose, pay your #@%%^$& bills, it is the lack of money velocity that is killing the American economy.
 
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I've thought a bit about how to reply to Skeptic Ginger's thoughtful post and I still am not sure that I have anything useful to say in a short enough time frame to make it interesting to anybody.

Let me start with this. I believe in the law of supply and demand with about the same degree of certainty that I believe in the law of gravity. That doesn't mean that it can be applied simplistically or there aren't various exceptions but on average and for most practical purposes the law of supply and demand is true. It is one of the principal mechanisms that underlies the capitalist system and the failure to understand the implications of it has led to some massive human disasters.

I can not explain the basis of my belief in the law of supply and demand quickly anymore than I can explain why I believe in evolution over creationism quickly. It is a belief structure based on years of observation and some study.

One of the implications of the law of supply and demand is that when workers have priced their wages substantially above free market wages and the entity they work for competes in the free market the entity will fail. In fact, there is pretty strong empirical evidence for that in the way the US has gradually moved away from unions. The sectors of the economy where the unions still hold power are also the sectors of the economy where free market competition is constrained or non-existent.

SG, envisions a world where without union protection workers are powerless and poor. The fact that the vast majority of the US is not unionized would seem to belie that, but when people believe in unions, an objective appraisal of that reality is not usually on the table.
I'm going to interject here but then answer the whole post at the end. This is not a complete view of what I envision.

The historical record supports the view that employers do abuse the workforce, from the time of land owners and peasants to the beginning of the industrial revolution with the divide between the wealthy factory owner and the poor laborer. This does not mean I believe this is true for all employers and all employees at all times. It also depends on the level of unemployment, the effectiveness of worker safety regulations, and whether there is a gap between rich and poor or a more gradual continuum in income divisions.

It's a big mistake to oversimplify the very complex world.

One area, that I agree with SG on a bit, is that exactly market wages are not efficiency maximizing wages and that businesses have figured out the need to pay workers more than it seems they might to maximize their profits. I was mentioning my musing on this subject to my daughter who has a degree in economics and is in graduate school. Apparently this is a big topic in economist circles and she laid a few buzz words on me that I wish I had remembered so I could sound like I know something but alas I have forgotten them.

However, that is a far cry from believing that wages and benefits well above market benefit anybody except the people that get them. And this benefit is not some sort of violation of the no free lunch principle. Those wages come from someplace. Of course, a great many people think that they all come from some anonymous bunch of fat white guys that have too much money anyway. They don't actually. We are taxing the fat white guys at just about the revenue maximizing rates right now, so a whole lot of the above market wages and benefits come from middle class workers and entrepreneurs trying to get by.

And when the benefits paid to public service workers rise above a certain level, it is easy to imagine that a tipping point can be reached where businesses and workers are driven out of the districts where that is true. And when that happens the government needs to either raise taxes and drive more businesses and workers out of their jurisdiction, cut services, or cut benefits.

As a personal aside, based on some of SG's comments it seems that she might see me as some sort of partisan Republican. It is true that I am a registered Republican, but I have little doubt that Bush was the worst president of my life and Nixon was the most disgusting. I haven't voted for a Republican for national office for a number of years. I think Republicans are at least as irresponsible at running the government as Democrats. A huge portion of the economic problems the US faces today are due to the poor governance by the Republicans when they were in power. Republican pro-business ideas are largely crony driven and often anti-free market. It is interesting to me that the excesses of both parties make it so that successful long term governance by either one of them is impossible, but somehow we manage to muddle through when we have a little bit of each.

ETA: In the interest of full disclosure, I just remembered that I voted for Fiorina (the Republican candidate for senate in CA) over Boxer in the last election.
For the record, your views suggest you are a Republican. But I don't believe for a minute that most Republicans are Repubs. I'm just disappointed the Republicans have let the Repubs take over their party.

And if it's any consolation, I'm disappointed with our party leadership as well, for different reasons. And it irks me when people assume every Progressive is a socialist. I am very much a capitalist, and also very much a Progressive.


But back to the subject. Currently unions are being attacked, not because they deserve it, but because they contribute to Democratic Party candidates. It's been the goal of the Repubs since Karl Rove came on the scene, to win elections by dishonest means and eliminating a major source of funding for one's political rivals is a dishonest means of winning elections.

If people were not so susceptible to propaganda campaigns, the Repubs could not get away with this campaign to demonize unions. People would be evaluating the facts and not the advertising messages. If unions really were getting wages and benefits well above the market rate, then they would be part of the problem. And of course a union here and there from time to time has been a problem.

But what is the situation here? There was/is a recession. State and local government revenues are decreased. The Repubs seized the opportunity for political gain and are trying to create the false image that unionized government workers are interfering with government efforts to balance their reduced revenue budgets. This is totally out of the blue. Where have any unions not been reasonable at the bargaining table when governments presented their problem budgets in the negotiations? IT HASN'T HAPPENED. It's been trumped up as a ploy to demonize unions.

Are there issues with pensions? Undoubtedly. Did those problems occur because unionized labor demanded more than the respective budgets could bear? NO. The problems occurred because of the recession. At the time the pensions were negotiated, they were reasonable pensions. WI government workers' unions agreed to necessary sacrifices very early on in this affair. One can also easily show, Walker never went to the unions to negotiate in the first place. Why is that? It's because the government employee unions were always responsible in WI. Walker created the fake demon to manipulate public opinion and pass legislation gutting the ability of the unions to support Democratic candidates. It was never about the budget.

And if you look at the Repub legislation at the federal level, surprise, all the Repub supported budget cuts are ideologically based, not responsible budget based. But I digress.


If people weren't so susceptible to slogans and an oversimplified view of reality, we wouldn't be having a discussion of, unions are always bad or never bad. It wouldn't be a discussion of regulations are always bad or never bad. It wouldn't be a discussion of the free market vs socialism. Instead it would be a conversation about when one system was better and when the other was.

In the case of WI government employee unions, can anyone point to the union negotiations where the unions refused to accept the reality of the current WI state budget? Can someone find a news article about 'the union problem' before Walker claimed there was a union problem? That would be evidence Walker wasn't taking advantage of the recession to eliminate a major funding source for his political opponents. Or, that Walker wasn't taking advantage of the recession to eliminate a thorn in the side of greedy profiteers.



What an interesting side note, my son is just finishing his math degree and is waiting to hear back on his applications to graduate school to get his economics degree. Where is your daughter in school?
 
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Edited for civility.
 
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What? No one has posted the latest news here? The Repubs in WI simply took the union gutting legislation out of the "budget bill" and made a separate bill that doesn't require a quorum.

And there is a completely false TV commercial being aired lying about the amount the union workers are actually paid compared to non-union workers and lying about the fact the mandatory union dues do not include the political portion of union spending. Now who do you suppose is funding that ad?

Need anyone ask that question?
 
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So they made a separate bill to gut the union?

Oh crap, they did! Well I guess he will be recalled, as will most of the GOP state senators. This will only be temporary.
 
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