Ender
Member
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2007
- Messages
- 12,527
Perhaps you would like to retract your impulsive and condescending statement.
I am aware that unions create unemployment at the margins, raise labor costs to producers, lower producer output, and reduce social welfare inasmuch as we define this as the sum of consumer and producer surplus. Which seems to be the essence of your Lew Rockwell article.
As long as a union does not use force to prevent producers from hiring non-union labor, use force to limit mobility to or from union membership, or conspire with governments there is nothing illegal or unconstitutional about it. Unions can be peaceful and voluntary associations. I don't like them much, but neither do I like smoking or certain kinds of music. People are free to sell themselves and their labor as they see fit, and may discriminate regarding their associations with coworkers.
You are free to vote with your consumer dollars.
And the UAW can strike until all of the auto manufacturing moves to South Korea and Japan, and the only job for the U.S. auto workers is at the new Walmart that opens in their town.
My response is neither impulsive or condescending- I respect you- but you are wrong about unions.
Unions began as mafia types and they remain the same. The only difference is now they are "legal"- which does not mean lawful.
All unions use force- just try to work at a unionized business without joining. Unions do not increase wages overall and they help destroy the economy. The one reason Walmart is picked on continually, even though they operate no differently than Costco, etc. is because they will not unionize.
In a free market society, a worker can leave a low paying job and go to a better one- the owners of businesses will increase pay if they need good workers. It is always product that drives the financial state of a country, not unions or fractionalized banking. These are manipulations for the few- not the many.
Right to work states are much closer to real freedom than states that obey unions.