My first question is where does the union fit in all of this?
I can tell you where the union fit into it for me. They trained me as an apprentice carpenter, gave me a decent wage for hard work, provided a decent insurance package for my pregnant wife and kids. And although they trained me to be a millwright, I decided after ten years in the union and lean times (early 80s) I would return to college and a different life path. In short the union was good to me.
Whenever we had a an opportunity to vote for a wage increase I turned it down. I was making a good wage and valued the health and insurance benefits. Basically, I didn't think we needed to be greedy.
However, I would like to make a comment which is unsubstantiated and only my suspicions. It seems to me many of the construction workers I see around now are latinos. Right up front I have nothing against latinos. My son in law is latino, my wife is Korean, and my grandkids are latino-korean-white. But I do wonder if construction jobs are being filled by illegal immigrants. And if so, they are mostlikely getting screwed. The companies will do whatever it takes to expand their bottom line, naturally.
The next song and dance we will hear from the construction trades - just like the agriculture and service industries whine - will be we can't compete unless we hire illegals. A while back there were some articles in the Washington Times about the fallacy of "needing illegals" for the agricultural industries. Basically, instead of mechanizing to stay competative, the agricultural industries are subsidized through illegal workers, and the rest of society (thats you) picks up the tab for the social, education, and health costs.
Edit: PS: forgot - someday, if everything goes as planned, I will also have some retirement bucks from the union plan. Sorry about the double posts - think twice, post once, maybe, neh?
2cnd Edit: PS: My best friend was a carpenter-millwright for over 25 years. He went through a second floor hatchway and sustained an disabilitating injury. Construction can eat a fellar up. The union's rehab program paid for his college to become a civil engineer. Without it he very well could have ended up a "greeter" at WalMart.
What was this thread about anyway? Oh yeah, Fords - who cares.
