| It's clear that you are anti-union. Under your earlier guidelines, if you were a TA at a business course in Harvard, I would not be able to trust that you would give an impartial treatment of labor rights. "The threat of violence and property damage was what compelled companies to negotiate." It's like you didn't even read the Wikipedia page for Commonwealth v. Hunt. In that court case - the one which established the legal right for unions in the US - where was the threat of violence and property damage? Based on my reading of the MA Supreme Court judgement, there wasn't any. If there had been, the decision would have gone the other way. The collective bargaining power in that came from the ability of the workers to leave Wait’s shop, and by exercising their freedom of employment, incur economic hardship on the Wait. Perhaps I am wrong, and you can point to how the Boston Journeymen Bootmaker’s Society threatened violence and property damage. But if you cannot, then your understanding of labor relations is invalid, which should make you question about how you came to those beliefs. Or perhaps you'll argue that your ability to sign a non-union contract with a company means that those who have a union contract with the company are prohibited from freely leaving their employment? Because I can't make sense of why I can be forced to work for a company when I want to leave it, just because you want to work there. |
I don't think being pro or anti-union is the issue. I think being pro or anti-union due to ideological biases or a personal financial conflict of interest is the issue.
That's what the TAs unionizing could result in.
If one has a normative stance on unions that is derived from impartial analysis, that seems fine to me.
>>It's like you didn't even read the Wikipedia page for Commonwealth v. Hunt.
I was not talking about that case. I was talking about your earlier point about unions existing before labor laws gave them legal privileges, which you claimed proves unions can survive in a free market.
My point was that historically, in the pre-labor-law era, all of the leverage that unions had seems to have come from the threat of violence toward replacement workers, and company property, which intimidated employers into negotiations.
Are you familiar with how strikes were conducted in the 19th century?
Are you familiar with the blockades, violently enforced picket lines, etc?