Look, you're arguing in circles with yourself. The fact of the matter is if the company wants to over ride the contract, all they have to do is file chapter 11. Ch 11 filings are not a one off aberration. They happened well after 9/11 and will continue to happen into the future. You may call it an "imaginary future" but if that's the case, why is ALPA fighting so hard to have the bankruptcy rules changed? Seems like ALPA is treating it as a very real possibility in the future.
No, they did NOT happen well after 9/11. All of the majors who filed Ch. 11 did so within 18 months of 9/11.
You can't just "file bankruptcy" for the fun of it or just to void union contracts. You have to PROVE your financial need in court and, in addition, the bankruptcy laws were tightened considerably considering DiP financing after that last round, so it increases the risks that come with a Ch. 11 filing.
It's not just as simple as "we want to get rid of our contract, let's file bankruptcy". Again, you should know better.
So you're no different than most of the other pilots out there? Good for you.
Actually, most pilots out there didn't work in EVERY type of civilian aviation employment. They did one or two things then got into a regional or just went straight from school into a regional. I started early and tried everything.
as baseless as my lack of understanding of history?
Yes, evidently.
And I am debating from the FACT that those airlines which were unionized and attacked....have taken years to reclaim lost QOL and Pay issues. Maybe those attacks didn't count to you because they were done under Ch11, but I can tell you they mattered to the pilots who were affected.
No one was arguing with you that those airlines were unionized, attacked under Ch. 11, and lost pay and benefits that have yet to be recaptured.
News flash, sport: NO ONE SAID THAT DIDN'T HAPPEN.
What you are doing is trying to apply that argument to Skywest as an argument against unionization. THAT is the argument that doesn't apply because Skywest isn't under impending threat of a Ch. 11 filing. If it were, sure, argue away. Otherwise, debate the actual issue that PCL raised, which is... again, since you evidently can't read or simply avoid it because you have no ability to debate it...
Airlines throughout history have only unionized AFTER their Quality of Life or pay or BOTH were taken from them, and it took years to get them back. When you are non-union, the company can change your benefits and/or pay at their whim, ANY TIME THEY WANT. This happened to us at Flexjet and started the first union drive back in 1999, and the drive failed because the majority of senior pilots (like me) quit for majors or other jobs rather than accept the cuts (lost jumpseat abilities on AA, forced to move to Dallas or be fired contrary to the conditions we were hired under, cut in premium pay, etc), and the junior pilots were so happy to upgrade sooner than they thought, the union drive died.
If Skywest pilots want a safety net against those kinds of actions, they can vote in a union. If they don't, and you want to roll the dice, knock yourself out. Again, I don't have a dog in the fight, I'm simply pointing out to your pilots who are lurking here and reading but not participating that your assertions have NO basis in fact as applied to SKYWEST'S situation. They applied to other airlines, but Skywest isn't under impending threat of Ch. 11 and, even if you were, and Skywest filed bankruptcy, the difference is that, with a union, the company would have to prove their need to the bankruptcy court for those cuts.
Without a union, your company wouldn't even HAVE to file Ch. 11 to cut your pay and benefits, they'd simply send you a memo this afternoon, effective tomorrow morning.
Sorry you don't like the reality check, but that's the way this industry works. Again, if you're not lying about your flight time on your profile, you should know better...