I work for Harley-Davidson with the IAM union... . Jeff
Is the IAM part of the UAW?
I ask because I find it interesting that a lot of union members will standup for the UAW while having nothing to do with them. On another forum a member of the UAW in the aircraft industry kept harping on us about our comments on the UAW in Detroit. After several lengthy discussions it turns out that his branch/chapter/whatever and industry are completely different than that of the Big 3.
I know several current and former union members, Teamsters, some electrical union in Missouri and others. They all say the same thing about their respective group, "I can understand why people join a union, but for the most part they are a bunch of people who can't think for themselves. " My friend in the Teamsters was especially explicit on this fact. The coworkers have to ask for permission for everything, because the union may not approve.
A gentleman I know used to work for Ford and Chrysler, lived in Michigan and was part of the UAW. He and his wife both say that the UAW has had a hand in running those companies and state into the ground. Are they totally to blame? Hardly, but they don't deserve the brush off either.
Their bloated, pampered programs like jobs banks, yes they do exist, are paying top wages and benefits for people to do absolutely nothing. So, instead of GM/Ford/Chrysler acting like a normal company and laying people off if things are slow, closing a factory, etc. , they put these people in jobs banks programs so they can keep their standard of living. I have an idea, why don't these people move to another location to get another job.
My main beef is with the union bosses. I'm sure they're not making peanuts doing what they're doing. And the fact that they blatantly come out and support politicians and their policies. And using member dues for this. I'm sure most of the worker bees are good people who just want to make a decent living for themselves and their families. However, I am also sure that there are some that are completely stealing oxygen.
As an aspiring small business owner, I'll be damned if I ever let a group of employees tell me how to run my company and what I'm going to pay them.
The free market should be what determines wages and costs. If someone can build something cheaper somewhere else, so be it. A business is in business to make a profit, not to pay the best wages and give the best benefits. Between our crooked government, the unions, and our regressive tax system it is no wonder we don't manufacture anything any longer.
If no one has read Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand, I highly recommend it. It is very telling of what is happening today.