• chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This is always the argument that people bring up around this, and its woefully misrepresented. Biden signed a bill that 75% of the railroad unions agreed on. The bill was designed to be the bare minimum needed by the unions to continue their work. He stated after signing the bill that work still needed to be done, and that the fight for the unions for better wages and safety was not over, but he was signing this bill to prevent a total shut down of the economy that relies heavily on railroad infrastructure. Biden never said that the unions couldn’t continue to address the shortcomings of the system. He didn’t take away their rights to strike, or force them into compliance. He merely signed a bill (again, approved by the majority of the unions) to make sure that the railways stay open. If there is a continued failure of the railways, it’s not on him, it is because nothing has changed since then. There is still work to be done, it was only ever meant to be a stopgap to avoid a much larger crisis. If you think the writer’s strike and SAG-AFTRA was a big deal because movies couldn’t be made, imagine what would happen to the US if food supply lines were completely severed. Do you think the produce you get in the grocery store was all farmed within walking distance?

    • djsoren19@yiffit.net
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      1 year ago

      Hey maybe if it’s such a point of national security, and halting the trains would have such catastrophic consequences, maybe it’s time we nationalized the rail systems? Maybe having these rails in the hands of greedy profiteers who have demonstrated that they are willing to shirk on safety regulations is a terrible idea?

      • chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        “The government is corrupt, and they can’t be trusted to run things. Our infrastructure should be in the hands of the people.”

        “The people are corrupt, and they can’t be trusted to run things. Our infrastructure should be regulated by the government.”

        Pick a side, but in either case, the only way that we overcome these obstacles is with oversight. It doesn’t matter who controls anything, all that matters is how much we hold them accountable for the greater good. You want to really solve the problem, figure out how to get everyone to agree on what’s best. Until then, we’ll have milquetoast regulations, oligarchs too preoccupied with someone’s sexual orientation to actually do anything, and allegiances that change depending on the signature line on the checks.

        • SheeEttin@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I’ve never heard someone say the government is corrupt and infrastructure should be in the hands of the people. The government is the people. Most people say it should be taken out of the hands of private companies and put into the hands of the people, managed by the government. Workers controlling the means of production and all that.

          • chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’ve never heard someone say the government is corrupt and infrastructure should be in the hands of the people.

            How long have you been on lemmy that you haven’t run into a communist or socialist, yet? Shit, even the Libertarians agree on that, and they’re fucking idiots.

            The government is the people.

            In a republic, sure. This ain’t a republic, though.

            Most people say it should be taken out of the hands of private companies and put into the hands of the people, managed by the government. Workers controlling the means of production and all that.

            Oh, ok, so you have seen a communist or two hanging around here. So, the problem that we have with the government controlling (or managing) things is that the government itself is at the behest of the massive companies, hence my cry for oversight. As long as Big Whoever is throwing money at the lawmakers, the government will suck the dick of whoever they think is paying them. Truthfully, I don’t really see the difference between infrastructure controlled by the “government” or the “people”, because no matter what stamp we put on it, it’s still the United States of Exxon, Nestle, Pepsi, Disney, Google, Amazon, Phillip Morris, Pfizer, or any of the other big names that throw all of their money into obstructing the 99%. The “people”, as in you and me, have no power, and we control nothing. Some will say that they want to see utilities and essential services controlled by the “people” and regulated by the government, but the only outcome for that is exactly what we have: lobbyist making laws based on the desires of the 1%. In short (too late), if we want change, it comes from accountability. The only way we can fight to regain control is to hold those we put in power responsible for their actions. Unfortunately, those we put in power have spent a lot of time making sure that they can’t be held accountable, so, fuck us, right?

            • SheeEttin@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              See, I’m working on the assumption that the government is controlled by the people, not corporations. Otherwise you don’t really have a government.

              To throw out another catchphrase, governments only exist by the consent of the governed, and that does ultimately mean the people.

              • chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                You can work on whatever assumptions you want. You could assume that their is an eldritch council of Furries that dictate the laws based on how many episodes of Friends the Ugly Naked Guy was mentioned in, it won’t make it the truth. Governments do exist by the consent of the governed, unfortunately that consent is manufactured.

    • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Why did such legislation come at the expense of the workers?

      It was the company that built every one of these problems. It was the company that was responsible. It’s the company that has the resources and power to make changes.

      But when Biden stepped in to keep the economy open, he punished the workers instead.

        • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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          11 months ago

          So there’s an option to support the working class and option to support the rich, and he chose to support the rich, and only came back for workers later.

          Why can’t we just expect him to do better for the workers in the first place?

          • SCB@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            The people who would have been negatively impacted by the strike would be working class people. If trains shut down, people die.

            Every city is less than 48 hours from a starvation crisis, all the time.

            • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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              11 months ago

              It’s that bad, and he didn’t just give the workers what they wanted immediately? If they’re that important, why is it even a debate? If the country depends on them, give them what they want.

              • SCB@lemmy.world
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                11 months ago

                It’s that bad, and he didn’t just give the workers what they wanted immediately?

                A) it’s not “bad” it’s just the way cities work. Always has been, and will be the case until we truly master vertical farming.

                B) Presidents aren’t kings. There is a sizable portion of Congress that is extremely anti-Union.

                Edit: lmao it should read “union” with lower-case but fuck it because those people tend to be anti-Union too

    • Bartsbigbugbag@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      75% of unions representing what percentage of the workers? It’s less than 50%. It is NOT a minority that rejected the bill, it was the majority.

    • interceder270@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Biden signed a bill that 75% of the railroad unions agreed on.

      You keep saying this like a majority of people agreeing to something somehow prevents them from being fleeced.

    • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      A majority of the workers rejected that agreement and that’s what matters. Stop trying to frame this as being the majority.

        • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          It’s his fault because he’s the one that signed the fucking bill.

          The workers were being represented effectively! They were going to go on strike! He and congress worked together to stop them for “the economy”. He stopped their unions from representing them effectively by forcing them to accept an inferior contract that they rejected.

          The fact that you’re defending Biden on this is disgusting. Bet you defend him for supporting Israel’s genocide too.

          • chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            He signed a bill that was agreed upon by 75% of the Unions. You act like Biden sat in a room with a quarter million railroad workers and told them to go fuck themselves. He met with their leadership, and the majority of the leadership agreed on the bill. If only 25% of the leaders had agreed, Biden may have done more, but getting 75% of any group to agree on politics is a fucking miracle, and you take those when you get them.

            You can’t say that the workers were being represented properly and in the same breath say that their representatives went against their wishes when they supported the bill. It seems like you have an axe to grind about Biden, and you are letting your feelings about him affect your decision making process. You should probably vote 3rd party next year to cleanse your conscience.

            • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              He signed a bill that was agreed upon by 75% of the Unions.

              That’s not how democracy works!

              One person, one vote. There were multiple unions that were voting together as a group, and each union represented different numbers of people. The unions that represented the most people voted against the agreement and that’s why they were going to strike!

              The majority. Of workers. Voted to strike. The majority. Of workers. Were betrayed by Biden and continue to be betrayed by shits like you. The rank-and-file voted to strike and they were going to strike and then Biden shut it down.

              When a majority of voters vote “no” then the result is no, no matter what unions they belong to. It’s called solidarity. You don’t seem to understand how voting works, how unions work, or what Biden actually did to stop the strike from happening.

              If I wanted to cast a vote that matters this election I would cast a 9mm ballot into my fucking mouth. Seems more productive.

              • chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                If I wanted to cast a vote that matters this election I would cast a 9mm ballot into my fucking mouth. Seems more productive.

                I knew we would find something to agree on.

                I’ll edit this with a real reply:

                That’s not how democracy works!

                One person, one vote. There were multiple unions that were voting together as a group, and each union represented different numbers of people.

                Welcome to unionizing. You give up the voice of the many to have a stronger singular voice. Unions aren’t genies there to grant the wishes of every person that pays dues, they represent the masses by giving them a single voice. You are looking at this like all of the people that were put out agreed 100% with each other, and we know that isn’t true. They all had different visions of how things should work, and while that venn diagram had a good amount of overlap, it wasn’t unanimous. If it was, they wouldn’t need a Union rep. It doesn’t matter how many people each Union had, it was still a singular class. If you don’t like that, then I invite you to figure out a better way to do it, and then present your findings to America’s labor unions and get them all to agree on it.

                When a majority of voters vote “no” then the result is no, no matter what unions they belong to. It’s called solidarity. You don’t seem to understand how voting works, how unions work, or what Biden actually did to stop the strike from happening.

                When a majority of voters vote “no”, then their representative votes “no”. And when that vote is cast along with all of the other representatives, then the votes are tallied and a consensus is reached. Please don’t lecture me on how to vote, I’ve seen the Schoolhouse Rock video, I’m well aware of how things work. If you don’t like this system, then you should find some like minded people, and form a group, and then using the power of your collective voice tell the government that it needs to change… wait… that’s just a fucking union.

                • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                  11 months ago

                  The system was going to strike! The system was working correctly when the majority of workers voted to reject the contract and the contract was rejected. Biden and Congress stopped the system from working. Why do you keep lying about this?

                  You keep saying a majority of unions voted against the strike but that isn’t how votes were actually counted!

                  And when the majority of workers vote to strike, the workers that vote against it stand with them in solidarity.

                  You keep insisting that Biden was blameless, but there was going to be a strike. The democratic result of the vote, where the majority voted to strike, was going to happen. The rank-and-file democratic majority won. Democracy was working.

                  Biden and Congress are the reason the strike was broken. Stop with your historical revisionism.

                  • chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world
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                    11 months ago

                    oooookay. I see where the problem is coming from. So, from the outside, or based on what is shown in movies and TV, when a group wants to strike, it seems like they all secretly pass notes to each other in the lunchroom, and then magically come together in a rainbow picket line a few days later.

                    That’s not how it works.

                    When a union wants to strike, it is because a large number of it’s members have said they think it should happen. Then, a proper vote is put into place, and all of those votes are tallied and the Union leadership decides if there will be a strike or not. In the case of a strike, then the entire union goes on strike, regardless of how you voted when they asked if you wanted to strike. If you don’t agree with the strike, you may sit at home and not participate, but you don’t work. If you do go in to work, and you cross that line, you are a scab, and scabs are very bad people.

                    So, now that we have laid out the series of events leading up to the strike, lets take a look at what Biden did.

                    Biden sat down with the leadership, and said, “Hey, I hear there’s going to be a strike. What can I do to prevent it.” And the leaders said, “We want these things…” Biden said, “Well, here’s what I can agree to,” and passed over the list of what he was able to get other lawmakers to agree to. 75% of the Unions leadership in the room agreed to the proposal, and decided that their particular union would not strike. The other 25%, even though they represented a large portion of all workers, knew that the strike wouldn’t be effective without 100%, and so they didn’t strike, either.

                    So, looking at this, where is the point of failure? Seems like the lack of coordination between the unions in agreeing on what was acceptable was the problem. Biden did his job. He gave them the best he could, and it was accepted by the majority. Done.

                    Des that clear this whole mess up for you? Can we stop arguing this now?

                • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                  11 months ago

                  This is only one of the many unions that voted. You’re just assuming they represent everyone.

                  And you’re calling my posting performative. You don’t even know what the stakes were.

                  Here’s a hint: safety and derailments were one of the issues, and would you look at that, derailments are still happening!

                  • SCB@lemmy.world
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                    11 months ago

                    I just think it’s weird that you get so riled up but don’t actually care about the human consequences of any of this at all. Literally all you care about is the internet take you have about it.

                    That’s such a weird phenomenon.