The point, my dear sir, is that comments about the state of affairs made in long distant past simply don't reflect the realities of today. Originally Posted by MazomaniacIn this particular case you are completely wrong, and you know it but won’t admit it. Following your line of reasoning ad infinitum we should also reject the works of this nation’s Founding fathers and such quaint notions as: “all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.” (BTW, I am still wondering why Obama can never get that quote quite right.)
And like most conservatives the same dirt never sticks to you, does it? It's perfectly OK for you to quote FDR and claim he's the ideal of the modern liberal (which he certainly IS NOT!) but when somebody brings up the crazy conservatives of the past like Goldwater and McCarthy you run for cover like you never heard of them. Originally Posted by MazomaniacNo one is claiming FDR is a proponent for modern liberalism, and if you want to reject him as such, that is fine. But, aren’t you libeling FDR—a liberal hero—by inferring he is a “crazy liberal” when you suggest his antitheses are men like McCarthy and Goldwater? Plus, just because these men were wrong most of the time didn’t make them wrong 100% of the time. As history has shown, there were communist agents at work in the U.S. government.
Nice try, but it ain't workin'. Originally Posted by MazomaniacSerious, serious case of “opti-rectitus." You really should have that checked.
And if you truly believe that you can translate Adam Smith into a modern technological economy then you're just too far gone to save. Originally Posted by MazomaniacFundamentally, Smith’s major premise is/was that wealth is not finite. That has not changed. Furthermore, Smith’s work, like Locke, Rousseau, etc., influenced the Founding Fathers. Refer to my first paragraph above.
You better just click your heels three times, put on your tin foil cap, and wish you were back in the Kansas of 1835. Originally Posted by MazomaniacAnd the tin foil cap is supposed to protect his hair from the Comanche or Kiowa? How? Tsk, tsk, tsk.
I have the best solution to stop the bickering on this thread and put all of the issues to rest. Let us put a dictator in power and let him tell us everything we can or cannot do and how much we should or should not make. He will tell us if we can go to school, go to the doctor, go to work, etc and then all of this conversation is null and void.I thought thats what Obama wants to be.
If we keep going the direction we are going that will be the end result anyway. Originally Posted by topsgt38801
follow the conversation and the arguments will make sense...
First of all, we don't have a different system. So that argument fails out of the gate. And second, you can't count as part of your contribution to education that which you are required to pay through taxes. Get that, PJ? The point was, let me look where you put your money, and I can tell you where your priorities lie.
Originally Posted by charlestudor2005
Teachers cannot teach in Wisconsin without being “taxed” by unions they may or may not agree with politically. Those obligatory dues (evidently, the one Wisconsin statute that is enforceable)—public tax money in origin—are used by the unions to “buy” the votes of key politicians that support the unions’ agenda—more money. Unions contribute massive financial and human support to the electoral campaigns of their primary political allies: the Democrats. A quick review of legislation proffered and supported by union financed Democrat office-holders shows that such contributions are repaid in the form of granting unions generous legislated benefits, both monetary and in the form of rules that strengthen the political power of union officials. Wisconsin’s wayward Democratic senators have, in a totally unoriginal (and IMO illegal) exercise in futility, chosen to absent themselves from the state assembly in what appears to be a desperate ploy to preserve the flood of union money coming to them. Republicans, it appears, are every bit as hopeful of stemming that massive flow of tax dollars to their political opponents.IBH--I'm just curious about where you got this information (no, I didn't bother to look it up). The reason is that the US Supreme Court seems to have prohibited the practice you describe. The following quotation comes out of a California Supreme Court case (1999):
Originally Posted by I B Hankering
The [U. S. Supreme] Court drew its distinction between regulatory and ideological activities from a line of labor union cases. The most important of those cases, Abood v. Detroit Bd. of Ed., 431 U.S. 209, 97 S.Ct. 1782, 52 L.Ed.2d 261 (1977), held that Michigan could compel state employees who did not belong to the employees union to contribute money to the union only to the extent the money was spent on “collective-bargaining, contract administration, and grievance-adjustment purposes.” Id. at 232, 97 S.Ct. 1782. Mandatory contributions could not be spent on “political and ideological purposes unrelated to collective bargaining.” Id.; see also Ellis v. Brotherhood of Ry. Airline and S.S. Clerks, 466 U.S. 435, 104 S.Ct. 1883, 80 L.Ed.2d 428 (1984).Just wondering.
Take out the union middleman and allow teachers the personal choice to donate or not donate money to political candidates. .Teachers that do not care for unions dues going to the DNC can go into another profession just as shareholders that do not care for coporate money going to the GOP have to do.
Originally Posted by I B Hankering
Teachers that do not care for unions dues going to the DNC can go into another profession just as shareholders that do not care for coporate money going to the GOP have to do.how can it be that you think it appropriate that a government of the people, by the people and for the people..a government of all the people..can rightly be a party to such an arrangment of affairs that only people of a certain mindset be at repose working for that same government?
Originally Posted by WTF
IBH--I'm just curious about where you got this information (no, I didn't bother to look it up). The reason is that the US Supreme Court seems to have prohibited the practice you describe. The following quotation comes out of a California Supreme Court case (1999):I learned it from the media (Fox, HLN, CNN, ABC, CBS, PBS, NPR, but I don’t remember which outlet?). Here are some other examples. See @
Just wondering. Originally Posted by charlestudor2005
notably getting rid of the state's process of automatically collecting compulsory union dues from state paychecks.I don't think your underlined citations conflict with the Abood case. The Court there said that "state employees who did not belong to the employees union to contribute money to the union only to the extent the money was spent on “collective-bargaining, contract administration, and grievance-adjustment purposes.” The Court went on to say, "Mandatory contributions could not be spent on “political and ideological purposes unrelated to collective bargaining.”
Walker's proposals would strike hard at the power of the public employee unions. They would no longer have the right to bargain for fringe benefits, which are threatening to bankrupt the state government, and they would no longer be able to count on government withholding dues money and passing it along to them.
As I looked for evidence to support my claim, I’m noticing - surprise, surprise - the more liberal press seems not to be addressing this latter issue. But I also found this:
Wisconsin Statute 111.85 Fair−share and maintenance of membership agreements. (1) (c) If a fair−share or maintenance of membership agreement is authorized in a referendum, the employer shall enter into such an agreement with the labor organization named on the ballot in the referendum. Each fair−share or maintenance of membership agreement shall contain a provision requiring the employer to deduct the amount of dues as certified by the labor organization from the earnings of the employees or supervisors affected by the agreement and to pay the amount so deducted to the labor organization. Unless the parties agree to an earlier date, the agreement shall take effect 60 days after certification by the commission that the referendum vote authorized the agreement. The employer shall be held harmless against any claims, demands, suits and other forms of liability made by employees or supervisors or local labor organizations which may arise for actions taken by the employer in compliance with this section. All such lawful claims, demands, suits and other forms of liability are the responsibility of the labor organization entering into the agreement.
Texas is a “right-to-work” state. As such, teachers are free to join or not join a union. Originally Posted by I B Hankering
Regarding the inappropriateness of public-sector unions, as with so many things you can cut to the heart of the matter by simply following the money. Tax money flows from the electorate to public sector paychecks, and some of it is sliced off to pay compulsory union dues. Then union campaign contributions buy more favors which lead in turn to more and larger public-sector paychecks and benefits. It's a vicious circle, and at times when union-friendly politicians control legislatures and governors' mansions, the total costs of all the benefit packages are ratcheted up to higher and higher levels, and once you've given lots of stuff away, it's very hard to take it back. A particularly big problem is the exploding cost of defined-benefit pensions. The corporate world recognized long ago that such promises are simply unaffordable in the long run. Originally Posted by CaptainMidnightFirst of all, some states are right to work states so that not everyone is required to be a union member. Second, union dues withheld from paychecks can only be used in the collective bargaining process. Not for campaign contributions, not for bribes, not for some of the illegal activity you inferred. Just read the Abood case. Clearly, the use of union dues is strictly limited. That does not mean union members cannot contribute a portion of their pay to lobbying activities, or would you restrict that freedom of expression, also.