billy g Wrote:
Kingfish Wrote:
Am I correct that Scott Walker is only asking the unions to accept a 2% contribution? If so, that's kind of bullshit that they won't take that.
restrict the collective bargaining powers of government-employee unions. [/quote]
Given my acid-damaged, meta-socialist persona, I probably have little credibility with the thinktards in this discussion. But my brain and heart compel me to observe:
There has been an astonishing redistribution of wealth in this country since the early 1980's. Any rational examination of a variety of authentic metrics will demonstrate this. The super-rich continue to aggregate wealth at the expense of the middle and working classes. There is less social mobility in the United States than in class-bound societies like England and France. The pace of this re-distribution increased through the last ten years.
The steering mechanisms at play in the public sphere are managed by the interests that want to obfuscate this truth and accelerate the leveraging of wealth to those already wealthy. The communicative actions of those steering mechanisms change with time, but cluster around "free market principles", "oppose class warfare", "government isn't the solution, it's the problem", "take our country back." The effort to manipulate and control is strategic and organized. In this current season listen for any "connected" conservative saying "listen to the American people" and see if it's not followed by advocacy for some policy that adversely impacts most Americans. Orwellian at its base.
The Tea Party (with some exceptions... including attracting some who are genuinely and reasonably afraid of the modern world) has formed to carry forward these carefully crafted attacks on the middle class and the working poor. It is the most recent expression of strategies developed for decades in well-funded conservative think tanks. (c.f. Koch Bros.' dominance of conservative Washington, CATO, American Enterprise... on and on).
What's happened in Wisc. is part of a national strategy to marginalize the power of working people (the "budget crisis" in Wisc in part a result of tax cuts for the wealthy). The ability for workers, any workers, to organize around compensation and working conditions, has been the singular strategy to create a middle class in the last 100 years. President Reagan's "breaking" the air traffic contoller strike in 1981 was the first salvo in the war against the middle class. If you can't see the significance of what's happening in Wisc, that it is more than some reasonable concession requested on a % of benefit costs... well, then I might suggest you too are being steered, and the next step is to join a religion with Xenu and thetans in its cosmology.