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800Dog said:Spooky,
Instead of quitting, I had rather exercise my right to strike. If Delta goes away, so be it. I am planning on leaving this profession in the next year anyway and could care less about other employee groups. They could care less about the pilots and the fact we have already given a disproportionate amount. My fellow pilots are the only ones I care about. Sounds selfish but, most people hate pilots and so, I could care less about the affect a stike would have on them. I will sleep well at night and feel good about myself when looking in the mirror. I refuse to allow any management team to rape me and my profession. I know you will not understand this mentality and that actually makes me feel good as I can tell you are not a man of honor.
Buckaroo said:# of times "I" appears in the above post - 8
# of times "me" or "my" appears in the above post - 6
This post indicates an unfathonable amount of lack of integrity. What a bozo. This jerk will get what he deserves.
Spooky 1 said:Wow! You need to get a grip on you lip assh6le. I was walking picket lines when you were still wet behind the ears. Hey Bubba you don't know me or anything about me but with an attitude like that your doomed to failure. I think I will just sit back and watch you crater along with others of your ilk. You went on my ignore list pecker head.
anon said:Are you kidding, the ASA MEC made an Eastern scab the head of the ALPA Security Committee...
Draginass said:The real show to watch is Northwest. Stenland is going after the pilots with a chainsaw and, IMHO, is determined to totally subjugate the union. I don't think DAL management is that smart. I think Arpey at AA is sitting back and watching for the slash-and-burned "industry standard" contract so he can send the ultimatum to "his" pilot union . . . . of course, all in the spirit of "Win together" (or in reality . . . "You lose, but keep your job. We win and get you locked into a long term no strike contract like Eagle").
DaveGriffin said:You made some excellent points FBJ. Why did you delete them? I hope it wasn't a concern for the negative comments you could expect in return.
wolfpackpilot said:The CMR MEC will do exactly what the CMR MEC is told to do.....
By D.W. and his kronies in Herdon that is.
Birdstrike said:What you say may be very well true and while I respect those principles, how long is Joe Delta going to be able make the mortgage and car payments while living off a limited strike fund? More importantly, how much certainty is there that this kind of a job action will still accomplish the desired goal for the risks involved? Got leverage? That's all I'm asking.
Buckaroo said:No, it will be up to the pilots on whether or not there is a strike.
Publishers said:Surplus1, that is the first time I have actually read your posts and seen a let's just do this for the sake of doing it.
As I have said before, chapter 11 does not mean going forth as usual nor does it mean that mangement has the control they did. The fact is that more decisions are made for management than the other way around. Labor decisions are a part but so is the supplier chain, bankers, lessors, accountants, lawyers, etc.
It is far from a --let's just forget the old debt and move on like we were going.
surplus1 said:I understand the perogatves of the court, the creditors and the Company in Chapter 11. I am also familiar with 1113(c).
I am not advocating doing anything just for the sake of doing it.
What I am saying is this: If you are holding a gun to my head and I know for a fact that you intend to pull the trigger, I have nothing to lose if I attempt to take the gun away. If I fail, you shoot me. If I don't try, you shoot me. No difference between those two.
If I do try I may not prevent you from shooting me, but perhaps I can inflict a mortal wound before you do. If we both die that is better than just letting you shoot me without any protest.
That's what we have to decide. I don't know what we will do as yet.
The Company is not Comair, it is Delta Air Lines. The way they see Comair is not the same as the way they see Delta. We are expendable to them. We're just not expendable to ourselves. You know the rest.
surplus1 said:I understand the perogatves of the court, the creditors and the Company in Chapter 11. I am also familiar with 1113(c).
I am not advocating doing anything just for the sake of doing it.
What I am saying is this: If you are holding a gun to my head and I know for a fact that you intend to pull the trigger, I have nothing to lose if I attempt to take the gun away. If I fail, you shoot me. If I don't try, you shoot me. No difference between those two.
If I do try I may not prevent you from shooting me, but perhaps I can inflict a mortal wound before you do. If we both die that is better than just letting you shoot me without any protest.
That's what we have to decide. I don't know what we will do as yet.
The Company is not Comair, it is Delta Air Lines. The way they see Comair is not the same as the way they see Delta. We are expendable to them. We're just not expendable to ourselves. You know the rest.
Buckaroo said:Bad analogy. You left out the thousands of innocent bystanders (other employees) that would be thrown out on the streets by your "noble" actions.
I lost all respect for pilots during the "United +1%, or we'll strike!!" extortion.
surplus1 said:Maybe if you knew what the "other employees" think of our parent company you might not think the analogy was such a bad one.
The other employees are in the boat right along with us. If Delta shuts down the airline, they are history. If we shut it down, they are history. There is no difference.
Buckaroo said:I do know a lot of the other employees, and they would rather be on a life raft with management than on a kamikazee plane with the pilots.
FDJ2 said:Note the time: I agree with Surplus.:beer:![]()
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