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-   -   So you think the GOP is anti union? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1011950)

Vendzilla 02-25-2011 07:39 PM

So you think the GOP is anti union?
 
Quote:

Fact: President Obama is the boss of a civil work force that numbers up to two million (excluding postal workers and uniformed military). Fact: Those federal workers cannot bargain for wages or benefits. Fact: Washington, D.C. is, in the purest sense, a "right to work zone." Federal employees are not compelled to join a union, nor to pay union dues. Fact: Neither Mr. Obama, nor the prior Democratic majority, ever acted to give their union chums a better federal deal.

Scott Walker, eat your heart out.

For this enormous flexibility in managing his work force, Mr. Obama can thank his own party. In 1978, Democratic President Jimmy Carter, backed by a Democratic Congress, passed the Civil Service Reform Act. Washington had already established its General Schedule (GS) classification and pay system for workers. The 1978 bill went further, focused as it was on worker accountability and performance. It severely proscribed the issues over which employees could bargain, as well as prohibited compulsory union support.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...561737348.html

I learned this on Fox of all places, LMAO
So you haters are going to hate. But Carter did more to the unions than whats going on now.

Also , did you know that Ernest Borgnine is still alive, the dude is 94 and still sharp!!!

Vendzilla 02-26-2011 10:30 AM

Where's the anger towards the republicans now?

GatorB 02-26-2011 11:29 AM

How does this disprove that the GOP hates unions?

your thread title: "So you think the GOP is anti union?"

Ok so where in your rant is the PROOF that the GOP is PRO-union?

potter 02-26-2011 11:34 AM

omg like no wayz, a partisan political threads from vendzilla?!

directfiesta 02-26-2011 11:39 AM

Governor thinking that it actually is Koch on the phone !!!
 
At the start of the call, Walker eagerly reports on all he is doing: First, he tells the fake Koch brother about a plan to change Senate rules on pay to reel-in the out-of state Democratic senators who are holding out to protect collective bargaining. The new rule would force the Senators to pick up their paychecks in person. This rule was passed in a partisan vote in the Senate yesterday -- a move that went unnoticed by the mainstream press. The fake Koch asks Walker how they might get others in Senate to vote to stop collective bargaining. Walker responds that he's involved the Justice Department in investigating whether the union is paying the absent Democratic senators to remain out of state, or providing them with food, shelter, etc., saying it would be an ethics violation or potentially a felony. Wisconsin legislators are well aware of these rules and have already stated they are using their own money while they are out of state.

But the Governor also explains how he is going to lay off thousands of Wisconsin workers as a tactic to get the Democrats to cooperate: "So, we're trying about four or five different angles. Each day we crank up a little bit more pressure. The other thing is I've got layoff notices ready, we put out the at-risk notices, we'll announce Thursday, they'll go out early next week and we'll probably get five to six thousand state workers will get at-risk notices for layoffs. We might
 ratchet that up a little bit too."


The move has been called "despicable" and "ruthless " and "sickening." But most importantly, if Walker is choosing to lay off workers as a political tactic when he wasn't otherwise planning to do so, then it is not just morally repugnant, but legally questionable. State and federal contract and labor law has protections against this type of abusive behavior and inappropriate quid pro quo.

This morning the Capital Times quotes the state's former Attorney General: "There clearly are potential ethics violations, and there are potential election-law violations and there are a lot of what look to me like labor-law violations," said Peg Lautenschlager, a Democrat who served as Wisconsin's Attorney General after serving for many years as a U.S. Attorney. The head of the state teacher's association, Mary Bell, reminds us: "He literally planned to use five to six thousand hardworking Wisconsin taxpayers as political pawns in his political game. He actually thought through a strategy to lay people off -- deny them the ability to feed their families -- and use it as leverage for his political goals."



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/why-a...#ixzz1F2K9kLwF

MaDalton 02-26-2011 11:49 AM

the new owners of GFY are greek, can we now switch to discussing greek politics please?

GatorB 02-26-2011 11:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by potter (Post 17942516)
omg like no wayz, a partisan political threads from vendzilla?!

Yep the guy who says I should be banned for not posting BUSINESS related threads.

GatorB 02-26-2011 11:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MaDalton (Post 17942538)
the new owners of GFY are greek, can we now switch to discussing greek politics please?

Or we can talk about gyros and anal sex.

MaDalton 02-26-2011 11:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GatorB (Post 17942549)
Or we can talk about gyros and anal sex.

all i can say about that: don't do them in the wrong order :helpme

but i love greece - roasted lamb, cold retsina, sea breeze, sunset - cant get any better

Vendzilla 02-26-2011 12:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by directfiesta (Post 17942520)
At the start of the call, Walker eagerly reports on all he is doing: First, he tells the fake Koch brother about a plan to change Senate rules on pay to reel-in the out-of state Democratic senators who are holding out to protect collective bargaining. The new rule would force the Senators to pick up their paychecks in person. This rule was passed in a partisan vote in the Senate yesterday -- a move that went unnoticed by the mainstream press. The fake Koch asks Walker how they might get others in Senate to vote to stop collective bargaining. Walker responds that he's involved the Justice Department in investigating whether the union is paying the absent Democratic senators to remain out of state, or providing them with food, shelter, etc., saying it would be an ethics violation or potentially a felony. Wisconsin legislators are well aware of these rules and have already stated they are using their own money while they are out of state.

But the Governor also explains how he is going to lay off thousands of Wisconsin workers as a tactic to get the Democrats to cooperate: "So, we're trying about four or five different angles. Each day we crank up a little bit more pressure. The other thing is I've got layoff notices ready, we put out the at-risk notices, we'll announce Thursday, they'll go out early next week and we'll probably get five to six thousand state workers will get at-risk notices for layoffs. We might
 ratchet that up a little bit too."


The move has been called "despicable" and "ruthless " and "sickening." But most importantly, if Walker is choosing to lay off workers as a political tactic when he wasn't otherwise planning to do so, then it is not just morally repugnant, but legally questionable. State and federal contract and labor law has protections against this type of abusive behavior and inappropriate quid pro quo.

This morning the Capital Times quotes the state's former Attorney General: "There clearly are potential ethics violations, and there are potential election-law violations and there are a lot of what look to me like labor-law violations," said Peg Lautenschlager, a Democrat who served as Wisconsin's Attorney General after serving for many years as a U.S. Attorney. The head of the state teacher's association, Mary Bell, reminds us: "He literally planned to use five to six thousand hardworking Wisconsin taxpayers as political pawns in his political game. He actually thought through a strategy to lay people off -- deny them the ability to feed their families -- and use it as leverage for his political goals."



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/why-a...#ixzz1F2K9kLwF



67% Disapprove of Legislators Fleeing Wisconsin to Avoid Vote
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/publ...o_ avoid_vote

But back to the thread, Carter did this to the federal unions, are they hurting now?


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