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March 2011
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George Rebane

The Republican instigated, public service union sponsored imbroglio in Wisconsin continues to roil.  The left spreads itself as the protector of workers’ rights and defender of America’s middle class, the right attempts the logic of ‘this can’t go on’ and sides with the country’s taxpayers.  I think the left is getting the better of it, again because their message is simpler and it takes the attention off the issue at hand.

RLCrabb110226 

A good example of this is the above cartoon by RL ‘Bob’ Crabb  that appeared in the 26feb11 Union.  (Bob is a friend and RR reader who lets me use his work to make various points.)  Here we see an obviously overworked and underpaid teacher, hopelessly harried in her classroom of unappreciative brats while on her desk sits another little darlin’ delivering a scorching accusation that is clearly over the top.  The strong message is that the unionized teacher is the misunderstood victim of an unjust attack by the right.

The country’s lamestream media are not showing videos of the union thuggery that is taking place in Madison and other demonstration venues.  It seems that only Fox News has the guts to show how public service unions are responding to the compensation cutbacks and attempts to roll back their collective bargaining rights under current laws.  The workings and impact of such collective bargaining rights have been covered here and elsewhere.  They have been the bane of bulging the public purse beyond any capacity to replenish it.

From the 1mar11 WSJ we are again reminded that collective bargaining for public service unions was opposed not only by the conservatives, but also by liberal leaders from FDR through Fiorello LaGuardia to private sector union chiefs like George Meany.  Why was that?

Because unlike in the private economy, a public union has a natural monopoly over government services. An industrial union will fight for a greater share of corporate profits, but it also knows that a business must make profits or it will move or shut down. The union chief for teachers, transit workers or firemen knows that the city is not going to close the schools, buses or firehouses.

This monopoly power, in turn, gives public unions inordinate sway over elected officials. The money they collect from member dues helps to elect politicians who are then supposed to represent the taxpayers during the next round of collective bargaining. In effect union representatives sit on both sides of the bargaining table, with no one sitting in for taxpayers. (more here)

If you want to verify any of this for yourself, go talk to your local politician about who and how they represent you as the taxpayer in these negotiations.

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8 responses to “The Two Sides of Wisconsin”

  1. RL Crabb Avatar

    Since I happen to know quite a few teachers, I’ll stand by my cartoon. Most of them are hardly living high on the hog, and many spend their summers teaching or furthering their education to keep up with the times. One of the biggest complaints that I hear is that schools sometimes get precious little support from the parents of problem kids. Are there bad ones who should be handed a pink slip? You bet, but they are a minority.
    I’ll agree with Mayor Bloomberg, who said that unions need to readjust to the new realities of the 21st century, but they deserve to have a place at the table. The public sector unions are guilty of being sucked into the notion that the gravy train economy was going to last forever. They are hardly the only ones that fell into the trap. Ask anyone who bought a house as an investment. The tactics of the Wisconsin Governor prove that it is not only Democrats who “never let a good crisis go to waste”.

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  2. Dixon Cruickshank Avatar
    Dixon Cruickshank

    The problem with the realationship is bribery, the union can say give us a raise and we’ll kick in X for your next election – which in reality is a kick back. If that guy won’t go along they just find another that will, and help him get elected. Its a vicous cycle that has gone on since ’59 out there, at some point it has to stop I think. I can’t imagine a union leader walking in to a meeting and say ” we’re good”, they have to ask for more of something. Unions did have their place but seem to outlived their usefullness to the general sociaty as a whole, just as they did in non PE markets.
    They are not the middle class anymore, the middle class pays them but they have risen to upper middle class.

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  3. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    All of us know good people in every profession, even cartoonists. What is the difference if all those good people organize together to do a bad thing? That is the problem. That tactic (focusing on the teacher, not the union) is one of the best in the playbook of the democrats. Forget the overarching problem and concentrate in the individual teacher. Even though everything is headed to economic Armageddon.
    I agree that everyone needs a seat at the negotiation table but when the Unions buy a politician, isn’t that double dipping? Regarding the Governor. Elections have consequences and he campaigned on these things. He won. It is not a tactic it is a fulfillment of a campaign promise. I am sure we all shake our heads in disgust when the politicians don’t fulfill their promises and now, if you are a Republican doing the fulfillment, you get the same treatment. I would call that a unwinnable position.

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  4. Dixon Cruickshank Avatar
    Dixon Cruickshank

    Your right Todd, Walker did not sneak up on them – this was a major issue all along, he’s just following up after he was given the manadate by the real middle class taxpayor.
    BTW anybody notice all the people with bullhorns and drums hanging around look like degenerate hippies from the 60’s and not teachers, actually they look like they don’t have a job either. I will note – I would have been considered a hippy in 70’s too, I had quite a Scottish Mane on me, best thing I do is grow hair, wish I could sell it.

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  5. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    When the postal service was sued and the workers were allowed to dress and wear their hair any way they wanted I knew we were in trouble in the 60’s. I was kind of a conservative kid in the 60’s so I did not have long hair and I shaved every day. When I see public employees look so slovenly, all it does is prove they are that way at home too. There is no pride in how the look so it spills over in to their actions. Banging on drums and using the f bomb on their signs makes all of us upset.

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  6. Brad Fallon Avatar

    That cartoon is a good presentation of how teachers in their hectic and difficult job facing different characters of individual are underpaid and don’t have a high standard of living. They should be well compensated depending on the job they render.

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  7. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    From a longitudinal study released by the Federal DoE circa 2004, ten years after graduating from college with a 4 year degree, the lower the SAT in high school, the higher the probability the student is teaching.
    There are many good and hardworking teachers who deserve more, while there are very many not so good or not so hardworking teachers who either deserve less or deserve to be shown the door. As someone whose child was targeted and harmed by a mean, vindictive and incompetent teacher who was known by their colleagues for what he was, I’d like to see the good teachers work on cleaning their own professional house.

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  8. Greg Goodknight Avatar
    Greg Goodknight

    As a group, teachers and administrators both bemoan uninvolved parents and being the biggest problem (besides needing more money) hindering educational progress.
    If, however, a parent actually becomes involved they are then denigrated as just not having a clue as to what needs to be taught, or the correct ways to teach.
    Parents need power, and the only way they will ever have any power is through an unrestricted right to move their kid to whatever school they feel is best, and have the money follow the child. School choice, instead of school serfdom, where you belong to the school in whose area you reside.

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