whyenot
2 hours ago
Like most state employees, I am in a union and while there are MANY things I do not like about my union, from its high dues, to its constant forays into politics, to the supine pose it takes to contract negotiations, there is one thing that it does very well, and that is stands up against BS like this in a very meaningful way. Tech workers need a union or some union-like organization that stands up for basic worker rights.
KumaBear
an hour ago
My union is excellent but we are the exception to the rules. Our contracts always net better pay and retirement benefits. Sometimes I’m in disbelief what they sometimes get on paper. It wasn’t always like that but the protection unions bring are a huge benefit. Like them or hate them this would be something that would be a line item in a contract with protections.
yodsanklai
an hour ago
Stuff like that should be regulated at a much higher level than unions.
gwerbin
an hour ago
Unions are historically how that kind of policy becomes policy.
joe_mamba
an hour ago
In my EU country the national tech(IT) union is useless because they are simply toothless. Unions of teachers, airport, road, rail, etc workers are strong and always get what they want regardless of economic performance, because they can grind the country to a halt by simply not showing up to work for a day, but tech workers are under constant pressure of outsourcing and offshoring due to the globally distributed nature of work, so the unions never manage to negotiate anything against employers because they just have no leverage, when their workload can be taken over by someone from another country if they go on strike.
The local company union/workers council (Betriebsraat) si also equally toothless and didn't do much at the mass layoffs.
Unions are only as powerful as their impact to the comfort of the citizens and to the votes of the politicians.
archagon
2 hours ago
Forays into politics? Isn’t a union inherently political?
whyenot
an hour ago
No. I am not paying $1,000s in dues for them to spend it on a rally to "End Child Poverty" (to use an example currently in my inbox; and it's a good cause, just not a good use of my dues). My union exists to represent and protect me and my coworkers. Nothing more, nothing less. ...at least thats the way in should be, IMO.
pmontra
an hour ago
How about the career of the bosses of that union? You are not paying to advance them to the next step but suppo3End Child Poverty is probably well received by the people that will support them in their next job.
jauntywundrkind
an hour ago
That's it, the union: every union for themselves, no cause no solidarity, just cold hard mercenary cause of money for you! That's the true spirit of labor, I'm sure.
jplusequalt
an hour ago
>My union exists to represent and protect me and my coworkers. Nothing more, nothing less. ...at least thats the way in should be, IMO.
This is a political issue. Your rights as a worker only make sense within a countries political apparatus.
whyenot
an hour ago
No it isn't. It's a collective negotiation between workers and their employer.
dymk
an hour ago
With rules created and enforced by a legislative body called a…
jplusequalt
38 minutes ago
Which are only upheld through political structures ...
chrismcb
an hour ago
It shouldn't be. Of course I think sometimes it has to be. But it is supposed to represent the employees in a collective bargaining agreement. That is it. You could argue they should be involved with some politics around labor laws.
jplusequalt
an hour ago
This is all literally politics.
The reason you'd need to form a collective bargaining agreement comes down to politics surrounding labor laws. Hell, your ability to form unions in the first place comes down to rights granted to you by the government.
Avicebron
an hour ago
Can you see that spending money on charities vs spending that money on collective bargaining could be both under the category of "politics" but not equivalent in their form of "political action"?
jplusequalt
37 minutes ago
The point is that if you talk about unionization, you're talking about politics, because unions don't exist in countries where the politicians made them illegal.
Avicebron
32 minutes ago
Sure, but this conversation was about a union that already exists, so that hurdle has been cleared. There are still politics, but now they are different, they are the politics of "please spend the money I give you on X not Y."
qu4z-2
an hour ago
I wouldn't call running a vegetable shop "politics", even though politics clearly affects the environment you operate in (tax rates, bylaws, heck some weird dystopian place could ban vegetable shops entirely!).