Tom Iron
Mentor
I was brought up in a union household. The clothes we wore, food we ate and the roof over our head were all paid for by union earned money.
I followed my father into the Structural Ironworkers trade. At that time, it was known as a father-son local as far as getting into the work, although this only gave a son a "shot." He still had to measure up. You made your own name. If you didn't, you would have a hard time earning a living doing that work. And this didn't mean a good man without any relations in the business couldn't get a shot. It was only a bit of favoratism. In my own case, I thought my own father would rather have seen me killed, rather than have it seem he was favoring me. It was not a happy experience to have to learn your trade from your father. This was the norm, and it effectively weeded out those who didn't belong there. Many a son of an Ironworker had to find work in some other area of work.
When the blacks were forced on us, the above started coming apart. White Union members, who previously, never would have brought a son around said, listen, if you have the blacks coming (court order forcing their presence) in and they can't do the work, then you should take my son too, even though he can't do the work either. It's hard to argue with that logic.
In the early fifties, only after Unionism had become safefly established in our society, did city (NYC) and state workers start organizing. Before that, they'd been on the side of capitol (many times the police worked as goons for employers) in the war between labor and capitol. That's why I completely reject the idea of public service employees as unionists. They are not unionists and they can never be unionists.
The only thing that's held the so called public service unions together is greed. They don't give a rat's behind about the work. It's only about getting their paws on more and more money and benefits with them. nothing more. There is no union idea of a "fair days work for a fair days pay," or "an injury to one is an injury to all." Those concepts are completely alien to them and those are the ideas that started unionism to begin with.
Tom Iron...
I followed my father into the Structural Ironworkers trade. At that time, it was known as a father-son local as far as getting into the work, although this only gave a son a "shot." He still had to measure up. You made your own name. If you didn't, you would have a hard time earning a living doing that work. And this didn't mean a good man without any relations in the business couldn't get a shot. It was only a bit of favoratism. In my own case, I thought my own father would rather have seen me killed, rather than have it seem he was favoring me. It was not a happy experience to have to learn your trade from your father. This was the norm, and it effectively weeded out those who didn't belong there. Many a son of an Ironworker had to find work in some other area of work.
When the blacks were forced on us, the above started coming apart. White Union members, who previously, never would have brought a son around said, listen, if you have the blacks coming (court order forcing their presence) in and they can't do the work, then you should take my son too, even though he can't do the work either. It's hard to argue with that logic.
In the early fifties, only after Unionism had become safefly established in our society, did city (NYC) and state workers start organizing. Before that, they'd been on the side of capitol (many times the police worked as goons for employers) in the war between labor and capitol. That's why I completely reject the idea of public service employees as unionists. They are not unionists and they can never be unionists.
The only thing that's held the so called public service unions together is greed. They don't give a rat's behind about the work. It's only about getting their paws on more and more money and benefits with them. nothing more. There is no union idea of a "fair days work for a fair days pay," or "an injury to one is an injury to all." Those concepts are completely alien to them and those are the ideas that started unionism to begin with.
Tom Iron...