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Jim727 12-18-2006 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by m21sniper
Ah, i see. What the public percieves as important is skewed.
Nope - didn't say that, either. It is what it is. I'm trying to be as objective as possible - my position is that in this instance my values (healthy economy, secure borders, etc.) differ from the majority of the public. Nothing hidden or implied there.

m21sniper 12-18-2006 03:23 PM

"Originally posted by m21sniper
Ah, i see. What the public perceives as important is skewed."

Quote:

Originally posted by Jim727
Nope - didn't say that, either. It is what it is. I'm trying to be as objective as possible - my position is that in this instance my values (healthy economy, secure borders, etc.) differ from the majority of the public. Nothing hidden or implied there.
I would say that it's perfectly fine to imply the public has it's priorities ALL effed up.(whether you meant to or not)

Nothing wrong with that view at all when you're surrounded by self-absorbed soccer moms. ;)

Jim Richards 12-18-2006 03:35 PM

land shark

Jim727 12-18-2006 03:44 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Jim Richards
land shark
?? As in: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landshark ??

Jim Richards 12-18-2006 03:46 PM

yep

either that, or foam

Jim727 12-18-2006 03:48 PM

cork soakers

m21sniper 12-18-2006 04:12 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Jim727
?? As in: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landshark ??
Land shark is the nickname of my preferred Porsche, the mighty 928.

And here i thought he was just cheering me on. ;)

"The Porsche model 928 is often referred to as a "Landshark" due to its ability to "eat up miles" like no other car. In addition, the frontal area of a Porsche 928 can, when viewed obliquely, resemble the mouth and eyes of a shark - particularly the Hammerhead shark. The 928 was Porsche's relatively little known but dynamically superb front engined V8 super GT built from 1978 to 1995. Today, the 928 is widely lauded as a design icon and an engineering masterpiece for its era."

Jim727 12-18-2006 04:19 PM

I've been had! 2 points for Jim Richards.

RallyJon 12-18-2006 05:16 PM

Quote:

renegotiate... pants down... bent over... hot steel...

Had the union refused to concede the funds in your story, your buddy would be unemployed.
Now you're getting somewhere. So the union was helpful to the workers how, exactly? They couldn't protect the pensions of the very deserving (and apologies to Jim727 if he thought I meant they weren't) pilots. They couldn't protect their jobs either of course, but that's no surprise.

Why should a pilot--or anyone else--believe a company OR a union that blows defined-benefit smoke up their ass? What possible use is a union in an industry as cut-throat as airlines? They can't protect their members and their bargaining strength has a direct correlation to the likelihood of the airline going belly-up!

So who's most to blame: the unions who promise but can't deliver, management that negotiates contracts they know they can't honor because the union demands them, or the workers who work for this broken beast, see it from the inside, AND STILL INEXPLICABLY TRUST THESE TWO ENTITIES TO KEEP THEM OFF FOOD STAMPS IN RETIREMENT!?!

Jim727 12-18-2006 05:38 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by RallyJon
Now you're getting somewhere. So the union was helpful to the workers how, exactly? They couldn't protect the pensions of the very deserving (and apologies to Jim727 if he thought I meant they weren't) pilots. They couldn't protect their jobs either of course, but that's no surprise.

Why should a pilot--or anyone else--believe a company OR a union that blows defined-benefit smoke up their ass? What possible use is a union in an industry as cut-throat as airlines? They can't protect their members and their bargaining strength has a direct correlation to the likelihood of the airline going belly-up!

So who's most to blame: the unions who promise but can't deliver, management that negotiates contracts they know they can't honor because the union demands them, or the workers who work for this broken beast, see it from the inside, AND STILL INEXPLICABLY TRUST THESE TWO ENTITIES TO KEEP THEM OFF FOOD STAMPS IN RETIREMENT!?!

Thanks for clearing that up.

I don't think there's any smoke in a defined-benefit plan. It's nothing more or less than an annuity. The problem is one of honesty and integrity. Airline mgmt treated the employee's retirement capital to be management's - not the employees to whom the annuities were contractually obligated. The obligation was known *in advance* not a surprise or a demanded escalation.

The question is a good one - who is more to blame; the parties who lived up to their obligation or the party who spent the money they previously promised. No different than deliberately taking out a mortgage that you have no intention of paying.

If the word "union" is removed from the discussion I think the principles become much clearer. Airline unions are very unlike others in that they are heavily focused on *your* safety.

Jim Richards 12-18-2006 05:45 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by m21sniper
Land shark is the nickname of my preferred Porsche, the mighty 928.

And here i thought he was just cheering me on. ;)

SNL reference, as Jim pointed out. I would never reference anything 928-related. Unless it had to do with an engine swap to the back. :D

Whassup with all this off-topic stuff on this off-topic post? Foam?

Jim727 12-18-2006 05:48 PM

cork soakers.

Jim Richards 12-18-2006 05:49 PM

yep

Icemaster 12-18-2006 05:51 PM

Mini bar.

Jim Richards 12-18-2006 05:55 PM

Gumby http://gumbyonsnl.ytmnd.com/

Joeaksa 12-18-2006 06:56 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by masraum
Which may be less than they were expecting, but is still tons better than most people get.
Sorry, but this is not charity. He paid for this retirement and was guaranteed a descent retirement.

The way that the airlines and govt have worked together to screw people like this is not right and needs to be stopped.

ben parrish 12-19-2006 01:24 PM

Originally posted by Superman
Ben, if workers and their interests irritate you, then go somewhere else. Or educate yourself. But I doubt you will. Companies go belly-up and management gets a pass. You would rather blame the workers, your fellow American citizens. Take a hike.

Super, thanks for the condescending remark. I am plenty educated on the intricacies of American Business. I was employeed by a corp. that was forced into bankruptcy partly because of union strong arm tactics. Funny thing is, the union "represented" the least technical and skilled positions within the company; delivery drivers, forklift operators, shipping and distribution clerks. The restructuring caused about 1000 people to lose their jobs.
I am not blaming any workers for anything other than allowing themselves to be duped by an organization that pretends to care for the workers while lining their pockets with the hard earned dollars of its' members. If a union member had put all their "dues" into a savings account, when they retire, they would have a nice retirement. Instead, members will allow their union to cause companies to close their doors because the corp simply cannot pay the prices and conditions of the unions demands.
Look at GM and Ford right now; thousands will lose their jobs..maybe it was a bad idea to pay someone 100K a year to mount tires????
Unions are past their useful life in America.
I thought airlines had the FAA to watch safety; any business in America is also under OSHA's watch as well as many other industry specific watch dog groups.
A fair salary is based on how much intellect, experience or skill a job takes. It should not be base on how much a legal extortionist group can squeeze out of a corp. before they fold and pull out of the country taking many ancillary jobs with them. The collateral damage caused by unions will have lasting effects in the US for many generations to come. Your and my children will pay the price for the Unions "helping the common man".
How many unions have been forced out of "business"? How many have been forced to lay off workers?

I am for individual responsibility for ones future. If your situation is not to your liking, change your situatiuon.

Now as far as a company being able to keep employee paid contributions..that is total BULL$H!T. No excuse for that. A contract for employment and compensation should be enforceable.

m21sniper 12-19-2006 01:39 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Jim Richards
SNL reference, as Jim pointed out. I would never reference anything 928-related. Unless it had to do with an engine swap to the back. :D

Whassup with all this off-topic stuff on this off-topic post? Foam?

It's called freedom of speech i think....? ;)

And why would you ruin a PERFECT 50/50 weight balance to create a spin happy and inherently unsafe car? See, if i'm flying through a curve in my 928 and a deer or whatever runs out into the road, i can actually change my throttle setting or brake(hard) without a spin.

Imagine that, huh!?!?!?!? ;)

Jim Richards 12-19-2006 02:17 PM

oversteer is a feature. :)

Superman 12-19-2006 02:22 PM

Ben, I am not pretending that all union representatives are brilliant or even competent. Or ethically pure. I'm not that naive.

But then I recall your assertion that labor unions should not exist. And now comes a statement like "I am plenty educated on the intricacies of American Business." If you believe the former, then the latter cannot be accurate.


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