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  1. #1
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Leroy Lizard's Avatar
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    Obama and Unions

    http://www.hrmorning.com/obama-admin...-threats-real/

    Get the feeling the Obama administration’s pushing for increased union participation? Just wait ’til you hear the latest development.

    The National Mediation Board (NMB) — which basically serves as the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) for railroads and airlines — has just made it easier for employees in those industries to unionize.

    The three-member NMB adopted a new rule: If more than half of voting employees approve, the union’s in.

    Under the old rule — which had been in effect since the mid-1930s — a union could only be certified if it was approved by a majority of the entire workforce that would be organized. Under that arrangement, workers who didn’t cast ballots were counted as “no” votes.

    New appointment is the key

    Here’s the backstory: The rule change became possible after President Obama appointed Linda Puchala, a former airline union official, to the NMB earlier this year.

    The other members of the board are Harry Hoglander, a former pilot and union honcho, and Elizabeth Dougherty, an attorney and former aide to President George W. Bush.

    As you might imagine, Dougherty cast the a dissenting vote on the rule change, which she called “the most dramatic policy shift in the history of the (NMB).”

    The shape of things to come

    This decision isn’t all that earthshaking — after all, it only directly affects two industries — but it’s pretty clear it’s a harbinger of things to come.

    Why? Because of a couple of other Obama administration appointments to the NLRB.

    Recently, the president announced he was appointing attorneys Craig Becker and Mark Pearce to the five-member board.

    Pearce is a practicing union lawyer. Becker has represented the Service Employees International Union and the AFL-CIO.

    Becker and Pearce joined NLRB chair Wilma Liebman to give the NLRB a three-member Democratic majority.

    Both appointments were bitterly opposed by business groups, so the two became “recess appointments” — made when Congress wasn’t in session — so neither had to go through the Senate confirmation process.

    Bottom line: NLRB hearings aren’t likely to be all that pleasant for employers in the foreseeable future.

    Sign of the times

    It would have seemed impossible just a few years ago, but the potential for companies to face organizing efforts has increased substantially since the recession hit. Job losses, wage freezes and benefits cuts all tend to threaten employees’ sense of security — and unions offer workers what appears to be a measure of protection.

    That’s why savvy companies continue to do their very best to keep the lines of communications open and morale high. Workers who feel like they’re getting the straight story — and are part of a team that will eventually be rewarded for hanging in through tough times — don’t feel the need to turn to a union for protection.
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  2. #2
    Sooner All-World StoopTroup's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Other than you have developed the ability to cut and paste....what's your point?

  3. #3
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Leroy Lizard's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Just wondering if anyone has any comments. Duh!
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  4. #4
    Sooner All-World StoopTroup's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Evidently they don't.

  5. #5
    I'm a shootist Curly Bill's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Unions do some good things, but they largely suck!

    There's ya a comment.
    Behold the pale horse. The man who sat on him was death, and Hell followed with him.

    Olevet Posse Pistolero

    Winner of the Nobel Peace Prize 2015.

  6. #6
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Leroy Lizard's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Quote Originally Posted by StoopTroup View Post
    Evidently they don't.
    So be it.

    Whatever, dude.
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  7. #7
    Sooner All-World StoopTroup's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Quote Originally Posted by Curly Bill View Post
    Unions do some good things, but they largely suck!

    There's ya a comment.
    And there ya go....lol

  8. #8
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member SanJoaquinSooner's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    unions killed the goose that laid the golden eggs.

    free markets are the answer to an artificially induced scarcity of labor.
    Ingles solamente (¡no exepciones!)

  9. #9
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Leroy Lizard's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    OMG, we agree on something? (Actually, I'm not a real free-marketer because I support closing of strip joints, but that's another thread.)

    I just find it funny that we are pushing for increased unionization after seeing our auto industry collapse.
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  10. #10
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member SanJoaquinSooner's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Quote Originally Posted by Leroy Lizard View Post
    OMG, we agree on something? (Actually, I'm not a real free-marketer because I support closing of strip joints, but that's another thread.)

    I just find it funny that we are pushing for increased unionization after seeing our auto industry collapse.
    I'm a card-carrying member of the CATO institute. We believe both strippers and consumers of stripping are people too.
    Ingles solamente (¡no exepciones!)

  11. #11
    Sooner All-World StoopTroup's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Leroy found his soulmate. Lol

  12. #12
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Leroy Lizard's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    SJS my soul mate? You and I probably agree on more issues.

    'm a card-carrying member of the CATO institute. We believe both strippers and consumers of stripping are people too
    Consumers of stripping? Sure, if you are talking about weather-stripping.
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  13. #13
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member delhalew's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    The union issue is worse than ever. They have been connected to the Democratic party for so long, modern administrations have learned to use them in a frightening manner. The ACLU and SEIU in particular are now just the thuggish arm of the Obama administration and (D) representatives. They are used to reach out touch citizens in a way a politician can't be directly connected to.
    Research "workers" unions roles in the bringing about of dictatorial regimes throughout history.
    "Once a country boy's seen the way the steam rises off a man's insides on the sidewalk Tends to change the way he thinks, the way he sees everything when he goes back to where he came from."

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  14. #14
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member delhalew's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    http://money.cnn.com/2010/05/19/news...otest.fortune/

    What's really behind SEIU's Bank of America protests?
    banker_protest.top.jpg By Nina EastonMay 19, 2010: 6:15 AM ET


    (FORTUNE) -- Every journalist loves a peaceful protest-whether it makes news, shakes up a political season, or holds out the possibility of altering history. Then there are the ones that show up on your curb--literally.

    Last Sunday, on a peaceful, sun-crisp afternoon, our toddler finally napping upstairs, my front yard exploded with 500 screaming, placard-waving strangers on a mission to intimidate my neighbor, Greg Baer. Baer is deputy general counsel for corporate law at Bank of America (BAC, Fortune 500), a senior executive based in Washington, D.C. And that -- in the minds of the organizers at the politically influential Service Employees International Union and a Chicago outfit called National Political Action -- makes his family fair game.

    Waving signs denouncing bank "greed," hordes of invaders poured out of 14 school buses, up Baer's steps, and onto his front porch. As bullhorns rattled with stories of debtor calls and foreclosed homes, Baer's teenage son Jack -- alone in the house -- locked himself in the bathroom. "When are they going to leave?" Jack pleaded when I called to check on him.

    Baer, on his way home from a Little League game, parked his car around the corner, called the police, and made a quick calculation to leave his younger son behind while he tried to rescue his increasingly distressed teen. He made his way through a din of barked demands and insults from the activists who proudly "outed" him, and slipped through his front door.

    "Excuse me," Baer told his accusers, "I need to get into the house. I have a child who is alone in there and frightened."
    When is a protest not a protest?

    Now this event would accurately be called a "protest" if it were taking place at, say, a bank or the U.S. Capitol. But when hundreds of loud and angry strangers are descending on your family, your children, and your home, a more apt description of this assemblage would be "mob." Intimidation was the whole point of this exercise, and it worked-even on the police. A trio of officers who belatedly answered our calls confessed a fear that arrests might "incite" these trespassers.

    What's interesting is that SEIU, the nation's second largest union, craves respectability. Just-retired president Andy Stern is an Obama friend and regular White House visitor. He sits on the President's Fiscal Responsibility Commission. He hobnobs with those greedy Wall Street CEOs -- executives much higher-ranking than my neighbor Baer -- at Davos. His union spent $70 million getting Democrats elected in 2008.

    In the business community, though, SEIU has a reputation for strong-arm tactics against management, prompting some companies to file suit.

    Now those strong-arm tactics, stirred by supposedly free-floating (as opposed to organized) populist rage, have come to the neighborhood curb. Last year it was AIG executives -- with protestors met by security guard outside. Now it's any executive -- and they're on the front stoop. After Baer's house, the 14 buses left to descend on the nearby residence of Peter Scher, a government relations executive at JPMorgan Chase (JPM, Fortune 500).

    Targeting homes and families seems to put SEIU in the ranks of (now jailed) radical animal-rights activists and the Kansas anti-gay fundamentalists harassing the grieving parents of a dead 20-year-old soldier at his funeral (the Supreme Court has agreed to weigh in on the latter). But that's not a conversation that SEIU officials want to have.

    When I asked Stephen Lerner, SEIU's point-person on Wall Street reform, about these tactics, he accused me of getting "emotional." Lerner was more comfortable sticking to his talking points: "Millions of people are losing their homes, and they have gone to the banks, which are turning a deaf ear."

    Okay, fine, then why not continue SEIU protests at bank offices and shareholder meetings-as the union has been doing for more than a year? Lerner insists, "People in powerful corporations seem to think they can insulate themselves from the damage they are doing."
    Other reasons why SEIU might protest

    Bank of America officials dispute Lerner's assertion about the "damage they are doing," citing the success of workout programs to help distressed homeowners, praise received from community groups, the bank's support of financial reform legislation, and the little-noticed fact that Bank of America exited the subprime lending business in 2001.

    SEIU has said it wants to organize bank tellers and call centers -- and its critics point out that a great way to worsen employee morale, thereby making workers more susceptible to union calls, is to batter a bank's image through protest. (SEIU officials say their anti-Wall Street campaign has nothing to do with their organizing efforts.) Complicating this picture is the fact that BofA is the union's lender of choice -- and SEIU, suffering financially, owes the bank nearly $4 million in interest and fees. Bank of America declined comment on the loans.
    0:00 /4:27Banks: The new punching bag

    But SEIU's intentions, and BofA's lender record, are ripe subjects to debate in Congress, on air, at shareholder hearings. Not in Greg Baer's front yard.
    Why the media wasn't invited

    Sunday's onslaught wasn't designed for mainstream media consumption. There were no reporters from organizations like the Washington Post, no local camera crews who might have aired criticism of this private-home invasion. With the media covering the conservative Tea Party protesters, the behavior of individual activists has drawn withering scrutiny.

    Instead, a friendly Huffington Post blogger showed up, narrowcasting coverage to the union's leftist base. The rest of the message these protesters brought was personal-aimed at frightening Baer and his family, not influencing a broader public.

    Of course, HuffPost readers responding to the coverage assumed that Baer was an evil former Bush official. He's not. A lifelong Democrat, Baer worked for the Clinton Treasury Department, and his wife, Shirley Sagawa, author of the book The American Way to Change and a former adviser to Hillary Clinton, is a prominent national service advocate.

    In the 1990s, the Baers' former bosses, Bill and Hillary Clinton, denounced the "politics of personal destruction." Today politicians and their voters of all stripes grieve the ugly bitterness that permeates our policy debates. Now, with populist rage providing a useful cover, it appears we've crossed into a new era: The politics of personal intimidation.
    "Once a country boy's seen the way the steam rises off a man's insides on the sidewalk Tends to change the way he thinks, the way he sees everything when he goes back to where he came from."

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  15. #15
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member delhalew's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Wonder why Dems are fighting for CardCheck?

    http://blog.heritage.org/2009/03/26/...tion-on-video/
    "Once a country boy's seen the way the steam rises off a man's insides on the sidewalk Tends to change the way he thinks, the way he sees everything when he goes back to where he came from."

    POSSE TRANSPORTATION SPECIALIST. "It Fell Off the Back of a Truck."

  16. #16
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Dio's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    I wonder if there's "Make my day" law in that state? And I wonder how quick a bunch of a**holes could fill 14 busses and get the hell out, minus the 3 or 4 closest to my front door.
    "ESPN and Texas are now one and the same." -Stewart Mandel

  17. #17
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member SanJoaquinSooner's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Quote Originally Posted by Leroy Lizard View Post
    SJS my soul mate? You and I probably agree on more issues.



    Consumers of stripping? Sure, if you are talking about weather-stripping.
    No, stripping done by babes who are not forced to join unions.
    Ingles solamente (¡no exepciones!)

  18. #18
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Leroy Lizard's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    It's Matewan all over again. Except this time it's the unions wearing the black hat.
    .
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  19. #19
    Sooner All-World StoopTroup's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Quote Originally Posted by Leroy Lizard View Post
    It's Matewan all over again. Except this time it's the unions wearing the black hat.
    So the Unions used to wear white hats?

    Was that when you were a Union Leader?

  20. #20
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Leroy Lizard's Avatar
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    Re: Obama and Unions

    Quote Originally Posted by delhalew View Post
    Wonder why Dems are fighting for CardCheck?

    http://blog.heritage.org/2009/03/26/...tion-on-video/
    Sick. Totally sick.
    .
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