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  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

STRIKE - Scab bastards

  • Thread starter Thread starter JB
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Yes I agree it's hard because the picture painted by the government and the media is that it's "taxpayer's money" that's being spent. It's convenient, for the state and the interests of the rich, to have this distinction between private and public sector because it divides the working class, as you demonstrate so clearly. It sets us against each other rather.

True knock, just because everytime I look at the returns from my private pension I feel an urge to retire to the bathroom for a bout of poisonous shitting...I suppose that's no reason not to hope the public sector gets a bit of luck. I do feel very aggreived at certain parts of the public sector - particularly those cunts in the police retiring at 50 on two-thirds index linked. I don't mind a nurse or a road sweeper retiring but having to pay for those bone-idle cunts raises my hackles.

This is quite an interesting kind of solidarity,

I wonder what kind of solidarity you can get in the UK these days tho - what solidarity do the east europeans feel for us for example? If you're used to living with 15 flatulent men in a converted pigshed, it's going to to be hard to say "No, don't work for that much money cos I want enough to raise a family in a house". It's going to be a fortune compared to what they'll get back in Romania.

That's why it's a fight and not some kind of dinner party.

True, but I'm still wondering how much fight you can seriously have when there's 4 or 5 million people eager to take your job.
 
Brave people of Britain, my solidarity is with you and those involved in the general strikes. In the part of the USA I live unions are weak and my Union aint for shit. Were getting exploited and everyone is scared for their jobs.

Our markets are up, but though were broke ourselves, the Fed, the US Central Bank is extending a huge line of credit to the EU. I'm know economist but credit, I fear won't creat a lasting economy but will pull down the economy further in the long run.

Hopefully when the BRIC countries take over, the USA will be under the Brazilian sphere of influence.

But the UK general strikes are encouraging to me as a member of the prolitariat working in a marginalized industry.

If the Nurses are going on strike, who will take care of the patients. When Nurses go on strike here they give notice and registry nurses are hired typically from other states at $100.00/ hour plus food and lodging in nice hotels. Are the hospitals going to have skeleton crews or are they gonna hire temp nurses from Eire and other parts of the EU?
 
True knock, just because everytime I look at the returns from my private pension I feel an urge to retire to the bathroom for a bout of poisonous shitting...I suppose that's no reason not to hope the public sector gets a bit of luck. I do feel very aggreived at certain parts of the public sector - particularly those cunts in the police retiring at 50 on two-thirds index linked. I don't mind a nurse or a road sweeper retiring but having to pay for those bone-idle cunts raises my hackles.

That's fine, I think we can join together in solidarity and say as one "Fuck the police" ;) (actually I don't think they're all fundamentally bad people but they have signed a contract which puts them on the "other side".)

Ismene said:
knockando said:
This is quite an interesting kind of solidarity,

I wonder what kind of solidarity you can get in the UK these days tho - what solidarity do the east europeans feel for us for example? If you're used to living with 15 flatulent men in a converted pigshed, it's going to to be hard to say "No, don't work for that much money cos I want enough to raise a family in a house". It's going to be a fortune compared to what they'll get back in Romania.

I don't know I haven't spoken to that many east europeans. But again, this is another division that suits them, so what's important is the we refuse to divide, and if that means talking at length with a Romanian, so be it.

Ismene said:
knockando said:
That's why it's a fight and not some kind of dinner party.

True, but I'm still wondering how much fight you can seriously have when there's 4 or 5 million people eager to take your job.

And yet another division. I know it's difficult not to put your own interests first especially if you have a family to support. In fact I wouldn't suggest anyone puts their own interests to one side. What I think needs to be considered carefully is who you are fighting. It's not other working (or unemployed) people, it's the fuckers who have us working 40 hours a week to pay the bills! Know thy enemy. (Although I tend to think of the real enemy as being the system rather than the people who have roles within it, it's inevitable that those roles will bring people into conflict.)
 
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If the Nurses are going on strike, who will take care of the patients. When Nurses go on strike here they give notice and registry nurses are hired typically from other states at $100.00/ hour plus food and lodging in nice hotels. Are the hospitals going to have skeleton crews or are they gonna hire temp nurses from Eire and other parts of the EU?

The nurses always make sure there is a skeleton staff on strike days. Operations may be delayed but day-to-day patient care is not abandoned.

EDIT: Actually I'm not 100% sure that they don't have to hire temps, all I know is what I was told by a nurse recently which is that they make sure there's a skeleton staff, but it sounded like it was something the nurses worked out amongst themselves.
 
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Won't somebody think of the patients!!!!

I'm right behind the strikes, getting to work was a fucking breeze this morning.
 
True knock, just because everytime I look at the returns from my private pension I feel an urge to retire to the bathroom for a bout of poisonous shitting...I suppose that's no reason not to hope the public sector gets a bit of luck. I do feel very aggreived at certain parts of the public sector - particularly those cunts in the police retiring at 50 on two-thirds index linked. I don't mind a nurse or a road sweeper retiring but having to pay for those bone-idle cunts raises my hackles

bone-idle cunts or bone-breaking cunts
 
knockando- there are so many ways in which we are divided by those who fear what will happen when we stand united. fuck the border, fuck religion, fuck it all. though humanity does have a tendancy to create such divisions anyway, i do agree that this tendancy is being exploited with devastating effect at the moment.

as for the 'the public sector should accept its lot because there are worse jobs out there' argument- its fallacious. the logical consequence of it is a race to the bottom in terms of employment conditions, which benefits no one (though yesterday i did have fun getting someone to admit care workers should essentially be kept as slaves because they refused to concede at any point that caring professions, as a vocation, should strike over money). there are people working in worse conditions, they should look to those in better conditions as a source of hope, unite, and fight for them themselves, not bitch about the 'have-mores.' 4-5 million people may be looking for work in the UK, but if we degrade employment rights far enough, they'll look elsewhere, so we can't just replace our workforce with one that accepts shitter conditions indefinitely.

saw a fitting joke about this yesterday: A banker, a school teacher, a Tory MP, and a Daily Mail reader are sat around a table. In front of them is a plate, on which there are ten biscuits. The banker scoffs nine of the biscuits, then the Tory turns to the Daily Mail reader and whispers in his ear, 'watch out, that teacher is after your biscuit.'
 
You're right, this isn't a race to the bottom. That race finished ages ago, and the private sector 'won'. This is about the public sector making people's lives worse in the private sector to line their own pockets. Uniting and fighting for themselves, in the private sector, just simply wasn't an option. They don't all work for one big company, when they strike it doesn't disrupt everyone's lives, and they don't have their managers on their side also grumbling about the big bad government (as in the public sector even those at the top can moan about the government without fear of it damaging their prospects). In a recession especially, private workers don't have a seemingly infinite pool of money to grab like the public sector do - if they want more money they have to do more business, rather than just tell other people to hand their earnings over. We need to tighten out belts for a while, and lets be honest here - the pain still won't even nearly be spread evenly. But it's pretty obvious that next time Labour gets in and we have a bit of money in the bank the public sector will be able to be showered with money again (not that they'll be grateful). Personally I think that even if the money was there it shouldn't be spent on giving those who already have decent pensions even better pensions, but rather on other public services.
 
This is about the public sector making people's lives worse in the private sector to line their own pockets.

I'm pretty certain it isn't. The pensions are ultimately a secondary concern. It's about the precariousness of public services under a government which is using the recession and the defecit as a cover for manifesting its own ideology regardless of the consequences. Pensions are merely an excuse.
 
I'm pretty certain it isn't. The pensions are ultimately a secondary concern. It's about the precariousness of public services under a government which is using the recession and the defecit as a cover for manifesting its own ideology regardless of the consequences. Pensions are merely an excuse.

O come on now. The Conservatives haven't even made the amount of cuts Labour said they would. (The deficit has actually increased and we are 1.5 years into an at max 5 year term.) And we both know how much Labour likes to lick union arse. Ultimately that money for pensions will come out of the pockets of private sector workers in one way or another.
 
O come on now. The Conservatives haven't even made the amount of cuts Labour said they would. (The deficit has actually increased and we are 1.5 years into an at max 5 year term.) And we both know how much Labour likes to lick union arse. Ultimately that money for pensions will come out of the pockets of private sector workers in one way or another.

Come on, it's way too early to start talking about the effects of the cuts. Of course the Tories haven't cut as badly as Labour claimed in the run-up to the election (do you believe anybody's manifesto?), but that's hardly saying that the cuts (most of which are yet to be fully implemented) and proposed cuts aren't completely excessive. Though you've made it clear once again that your position is entirely ideological with the 'Labour licks union arse' statement. I knew it wouldn't be long. ;)
 
Uniting and fighting for themselves, in the private sector, just simply wasn't an option.

Personally I think that even if the money was there it shouldn't be spent on giving those who already have decent pensions even better pensions, but rather on other public services.

to the first point- i used to have a part time job for a private company and was offered union membership, so it clearly is an option. its not just to placate people, unions with private sector memberships have also been engaged in arranging strike action for better pensions.

i don't think the public sector is trying to get their hands in an infinite pot, they're just rightly asking for what they've been promised. is this not a fair comparative situation- i am contracted to do some work for you over a long period, you decide you don't want to pay me as much, you end up in court for breach of contract and end up paying more than you'd have done in the first place. i'm not convinced we can't afford these pensions- (especially if we incease taxation, which i think is needed; none of the tory reforms have had decent projected returns anyway, they're just making ideological changes using the recession as an excuse and couting on the innumeracy of our population to swallow their shit), the net public service pension cost is 0.3% of our GDP.. we spend 2% of our GDP on defence, i.e. murder, i'd pay for it out of that.

i'm glad you'd spend it on other public services, if the government was planning to do this rather than degrading all public services, i'd be much more up for saying people should give up some of their pension.
 
to the first point- i used to have a part time job for a private company and was offered union membership, so it clearly is an option. its not just to placate people, unions with private sector memberships have also been engaged in arranging strike action for better pensions.

Very true and easily overlooked. It took an influx of workers from EU accession states to revitalise private sector union membership over here in part because of the demonisation of unions which began in the late seventies or thereabouts. The US and the UK lead the whole of the developed world in media hostility toward the concept of organised labour.
 
whatever cuts the tories have made thus far regarding the NHS have had a significant effect [negatively] on waiting times for various areas where people are in need of operations, and detection times are decreasing in some areas. that's from stats that came out in the last few weeks. there have been minor improvements in the length of time between detection and treatment of some cancers tho, due to better system of referals I think. waiting times generally for ops are already on the increase.

I took my sister for her appointment at Jimmy's, yesterday for her current run of post transplant apps. it was meant to be 'skeleton staff' and 'essential services'. if they'd of cancelled her app for the day, she said she'd of been fine with it, as really it wasn't urgent in terms of actual care and I think that can be said for a lot of out patients there, so the term 'essential services' is even a pretty broad term, for 'pretty much most services' still being perfermed. The Nurses were as good as they always were, and the same ones she usually sees. the mood was positive and the pickets outside were upbeat and I plastered all their leaflets inside my car while I was waiting around.

Mary, among a few of who my sister saw, said her friend who was out on strike, similar age, about 45, and to maintain her pension to the level it was supposed to be, would have to put in an extra £1200 of her own money each year, just to keep it going to that amount.
Can't say I'd be best pleased if I started work 20 years ago knowing that regardless of me being paid a shit wage for a job that really doesn't pay that well considering the context of it, all things considered I would be ok in the long run, because there are great benefits and a decent pension I can rely on to help compensate for that. £1200 a month to find on a fairly low income I cant imagine will be easy. or even achievable for her.

how this can't seem like criminal behaviour and theft by the Government, I don't know.

this total focus on public and private sector debate and comparison I find totally dehumanises the situation, and 'allows' dishonest attempts for justification of the above by using a whole bunch of irrelevant issues to be brought in to justify the unjustifiable though political rhetoric and unrelated issues.

those issues are best separated and discussed individually; or just left for those who see life through a series of ven diagrams and charts and powerpoint displays, rather than people and situations

so much disdain for humanity Mr Smokes Blunts. it radiates in everyone of your posts. I don't know you well enough to understand why. I have been thinking about it a ton tho, because I don't like not knowing what makes a person dislike humans so much. Brimz 'best of BL' quote this morning made a lot of sense and helped a little tho. I've come from a decent middle management position in a private sector job too.

I really wish you'd learn to love folks. however annoying peeps can be, we're all just singing the same story, just in different ways.
 
to the first point- i used to have a part time job for a private company and was offered union membership, so it clearly is an option. its not just to placate people, unions with private sector memberships have also been engaged in arranging strike action for better pensions.

i don't think the public sector is trying to get their hands in an infinite pot, they're just rightly asking for what they've been promised. is this not a fair comparative situation- i am contracted to do some work for you over a long period, you decide you don't want to pay me as much, you end up in court for breach of contract and end up paying more than you'd have done in the first place. i'm not convinced we can't afford these pensions- (especially if we incease taxation, which i think is needed; none of the tory reforms have had decent projected returns anyway, they're just making ideological changes using the recession as an excuse and couting on the innumeracy of our population to swallow their shit), the net public service pension cost is 0.3% of our GDP.. we spend 2% of our GDP on defence, i.e. murder, i'd pay for it out of that.

i'm glad you'd spend it on other public services, if the government was planning to do this rather than degrading all public services, i'd be much more up for saying people should give up some of their pension.

Of course you can join a union in private sector employment, but if you aren't in a highly specialised environment good luck with your strike making a bit of difference. I can't even find out what the out come of the strike at AstraZenneca was either? As far as I can tell the company wouldn't and didn't budge? Either way we are talking about a whopper of a company here though - their profits were something like 1.9 billion in 3 months, and most companies aren't actually making any profit at the moment. The other type of company that workers can strike against is public transport - because they cause disruption to normal people's lives. So if you are an unskilled, or skilled but in a profession with an excess of staff (like 99% of places), don't expect to be able to strike with any kind of effectiveness unless you can harm the general public. And even then, don't hold your breath.

All of the figures i've seen banded about (your link doesn't work by the way), even by the Guardian, state that public sector pensions currently cost around 1.9% of GDP. That might not sound like a lot, but last year the government spent £155 bn more than it took in tax revenue. These savings represent about 11 bn per year of that black hole, which will have to be found from somewhere else if they don't go through - whether that means cutting more public services, or taking that money from the private sector workers. I would also like to point out that the majority of that saving actually comes from the higher earners in the public sector. I.e. those managers who currently stand to retire on £50k+ per year, plus a lump sum of over 100k. The middle and lower income workers will have to work longer (like everyone else in the UK), but they will ultimately end up with identical or better pensions than before under this proposed scheme.

I agree that it is unfair because they were promised the world in 2005. But the world was a very different place then, and it was stupid of Labour to assume that the boom would last forever, which it would have had to to make a 50 year promise like they did.

Come on, it's way too early to start talking about the effects of the cuts. Of course the Tories haven't cut as badly as Labour claimed in the run-up to the election (do you believe anybody's manifesto?), but that's hardly saying that the cuts (most of which are yet to be fully implemented) and proposed cuts aren't completely excessive. Though you've made it clear once again that your position is entirely ideological with the 'Labour licks union arse' statement. I knew it wouldn't be long. ;)

You haven't substantiated why my saying that Labour is the union's lap dog means that my position is ideological? They are reliant on the unions for funding and votes. If anyone's arguments are ideologically driven it is surely yours, because it appears that the conservatives could never do anything right. My point, which you didn't really address, was that even Labour who loves to splash the cash would have had to have made cuts. And it is a fact that they wouldn't do that unless it was absolutely necessary because it erodes their voter base.

If we spent £155 bn more than we took last year, and this year is worse than last year, how long do you think it's going to be before that becomes unsustainable? That money is coming directly from the bond market, and if they see that we aren't actually ever going to get out of this mess our bond interest will spike which will increase the deficit even further. The fact is that there are far more socialistic countries than ours - i'm thinking of Greece and Spain here, who failed to make these cuts and now find themselves in the shit. If taxing their way out of this mess was a possibility, do you not think they would have done it?

whatever cuts the tories have made thus far regarding the NHS have had a significant effect [negatively] on waiting times for various areas where people are in need of operations, and detection times are decreasing in some areas. that's from stats that came out in the last few weeks. there have been minor improvements in the length of time between detection and treatment of some cancers tho, due to better system of referals I think. waiting times generally for ops are already on the increase.

I took my sister for her appointment at Jimmy's, yesterday for her current run of post transplant apps. it was meant to be 'skeleton staff' and 'essential services'. if they'd of cancelled her app for the day, she said she'd of been fine with it, as really it wasn't urgent in terms of actual care and I think that can be said for a lot of out patients there, so the term 'essential services' is even a pretty broad term, for 'pretty much most services' still being perfermed. The Nurses were as good as they always were, and the same ones she usually sees. the mood was positive and the pickets outside were upbeat and I plastered all their leaflets inside my car while I was waiting around.

Mary, among a few of who my sister saw, said her friend who was out on strike, similar age, about 45, and to maintain her pension to the level it was supposed to be, would have to put in an extra £1200 of her own money each year, just to keep it going to that amount.
Can't say I'd be best pleased if I started work 20 years ago knowing that regardless of me being paid a shit wage for a job that really doesn't pay that well considering the context of it, all things considered I would be ok in the long run, because there are great benefits and a decent pension I can rely on to help compensate for that. £1200 a month to find on a fairly low income I cant imagine will be easy. or even achievable for her.

how this can't seem like criminal behaviour and theft by the Government, I don't know.

this total focus on public and private sector debate and comparison I find totally dehumanises the situation, and 'allows' dishonest attempts for justification of the above by using a whole bunch of irrelevant issues to be brought in to justify the unjustifiable though political rhetoric and unrelated issues.

those issues are best separated and discussed individually; or just left for those who see life through a series of ven diagrams and charts and powerpoint displays, rather than people and situations

so much disdain for humanity Mr Smokes Blunts. it radiates in everyone of your posts. I don't know you well enough to understand why. I have been thinking about it a ton tho, because I don't like not knowing what makes a person dislike humans so much. Brimz 'best of BL' quote this morning made a lot of sense and helped a little tho. I've come from a decent middle management position in a private sector job too.

I really wish you'd learn to love folks. however annoying peeps can be, we're all just singing the same story, just in different ways.

I don't really know what gives you the impression that I don't love folks and show disdain for them because I don't agree with your position on various issues? I am a realist through and through, and it seems pretty obvious to me that someone has to pay for these pensions in the long run. I would absolutely love it if we could give everyone a 10k a year pension when they retire, but here on planet earth I don't think that's ever going to be feasible. I regularly hear that public sector workers get worse pay than the private sector, then being the horrible person that I am I go looking for evidence of this, and I find out that public sector workers in fact get paid more. I see that as a country we are going to be in 1 trillion pounds worth of debt by the end of the year, and I think about the life my children are going to have if I stay in this country. I think about the fact we will likely go bust again, and how it could all be avoided if we took some of the pain now instead of magnifying it by a thousand in 20 years time. Politicians today are mortgaging our children's future for votes today, and our children will not thank us for it when their public services resemble third world countries.
 
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citizensmith.jpg


Power To the People! :D
 
seriously? you have no idea about me, and Im not about to give you my history indepth. no time.

I'll just ask some questions, which I'm not really looking for you to share the answers with me atm.

what if I USED to be you? what if I developed FROM you?

ever think of that?

what if my job used to be a cog in the bigger picture, ensuring others complied with it?

what if I was EXCELLENT at it and got paid tons of money for it, with a great car and all the other 'accessories'?

what if I just learned, one day, that I just valued other things, and decided to leave to achieve them?

------

I'm a Pisces btw. I trust youre not a scorpio [/half-hearted sarcasm]

Bwahaha, pinning you down is like trying to nail custard to the wall. One day you're harping on about personality types and maslow because it suits you, and the next when I use them to show you up for what you really are you abandon them. You didn't used to be me, even if you lived a life similar to mine. Underneath there would have always been that whinging douchebag who couldn't debate to save her life. Not once have you ever put down a point worthy of debate, that contained any substance whatsoever. I have one question for you:

Do you eat your food through your ass?
 
You see I am an NT, and you will find that on here a lot of NTs agree with me, whilst a lot of feelers agree with you. I place faith in hard facts and logic, whereas you place faith solely in emotions and personal experience - which are useless to me.

Ever thought that your steadfast belief in rigid personality types (please spare us the Myers-Briggs codswallop) may have compromised your ability (or inclination) to consider 'hard facts and logic'?

If we must court the M-B dogma though, then you certainly come across as more of a 'feeler' than the majority of posters here, based on the (ahem) hard evidence of the emotive content in your posts.

Just a thought...
 
Bwahaha, pinning you down is like trying to nail custard to the wall. One day you're harping on about personality types and maslow because it suits you, and the next when I use them to show you up for what you really are you abandon them. You didn't used to be me, even if you lived a life similar to mine. Underneath there would have always been that whinging douchebag who couldn't debate to save her life. Not once have you ever put down a point worthy of debate, that contained any substance whatsoever. I have one question for you:

Do you eat your food through your ass?
urge. I meant the jungian ENxx you. sigh

I'm sorry you need me to point everything out in diagrams. I could do it correctly, in a worthwhile way ... and break each point, explain the motivation, intent, what youre ignoring. esp the feminism point, lawd, you make assumptions about why people decide to not respond to others [very poor assumptions]. you are crippled in this way. but this is pages worth of words. and I'm not your shrink.

best/simpliest demonstration ive got as an all round analogy for our main differences, is go back and check out the comment you responded to when I made the 'You're posts make me want to be slain'.

Can you see anything obvious that you overlooked when replying? anything obvious that you missed when you made that post?

it's all there
 
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