QUOTE:
"We all thought we might get to that elusive Major someday and then buy a big house and get treated with respect"
Come on now. You're really that insecure??
It should only matter if you respect yourself.
What you are pining for, my friend, is status, plain and simple.
If you can achieve it, go ahead, but:
I have realized that many pilots think that their profession shoould be immune from the laws of supply and demand.
Do we think we're nobility or something?
Get as much $$$ as you can, for as long as you can. That's the way we do it here, but when the ride is finally over, we must have the maturity to realize that we've been lucky all along.
People spout and spout about what they 'deserve' until I'm sick of hearing the word come out of their pie holes. What about all the folks who have worked longer and harder than you/me? Don't they 'deserve' at least what we have?
So it really is not a matter of justice, for many of us. It is simple greed couched as though it was an issue of right and wrong.
Who was the guy who thinks that the mainline guys are 'holding the bar up for your future'. Stop kidding yourself. That ain't why they're doing it. They will keep pushing for better pay even if it meant you got less. That's capitalsm, baby!
The factors that are to blame, one again:
1) Deregulation, which opened the door to more competition.
2) Perception, on the part of the work force that pilot jobs would be available.
3) Excess entrants into the profession, making it an employer's market,
and the big one:
The stupidity, short-sightedness, and arrogance of ALPA and many mainline pilots in thinking that their cushy spots were safe forever, and simple things like scope and other contract provisions were all it would take to protect themselves.
This was a Maginot Line strategy, and it is failing.
ALPA's inability or unwillingness to keep the pilots in this country truly unified is the real reason.
No one wanted to take any short-term inconveniences or costs to plug these holes in the system.
We have sold out tomorrow for a little more today, and it predictably did not work out well.
For many of us, management will soon say "Check and Mate", and that will be that.
Don't flame me, cause I'm suffering this situation too. When times were good, I knew it might end at any moment. Now that it has, I'm not gonna b1tch about what I 'deserve'.
Management has played the game well, and knowsthe rulebook. We have played an emotional game, and been veryr prickly about our image.
Think mgmt=WWII Germany. Victory at all costs.
Pilots= WWII France. Testy, unable to really fight, angry that they have to.
I liken it to the Wal-Mart effect.
When Wal-Mart first moves to a small town, everyone starts shopping there for the lower prices (sometimes much lower). Then, local businesses start to close up shop. Then the townspeople are upset about this and starts to think that other people need to so business with the local shops. (They, of course, cannot. They "need" the cheaper prices, but those other folks can "aafford" to keep tha locals stores alive). See? What's good for you ain't good for me.
Then, all the people who work for the local merchants are out of work, and the onlt profit being made in town is Wal-Mart.
This is very similar to our profession's current state, and the main reason we should accept our guilt in bringing much of it about.