joe_pilot
There be whales here!
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2004
- Posts
- 592
You said no to the very form of representation which is directly responsible for every single benefit of your chosen profession. Weakening that organization will only come back to haunt us all, wether we stay at the regional level or choose to move up to the majors.
See, even though I voted "yes", I disagree with this. Even though unions have been a driving force behind a lot of improvements, they are not the only reason these things come to pass. Case in point: if new hire pay is too low, then no new hires, so pay is raised. It is good business to make certain changes that benefit pilots. Now I'm not saying management is "going to take care of us", but I do refute that a union is "...directly responsible for every single benefit of your chosen profession."
That is just a bit of spin, don't you think?
Again, I voted "yes"
I wonder just how many of you NO-VOTERS will say no, when it comes time to join the union at your major airline job?
Or better yet, at the job interview, will you man-up and make it clear to the pilots doing the interviewing that you voted no for a union at Skywest?
Or will you suddenly become a card carrying AFL-CIO left wing supporter of the labor movement and tell the interviewer how you were one of those who voted yes and you are leaving Skywest because ALPA didn't get on the property!!!
Yup, I'm sure this will happen to some people. Not everyone can backup what they believe(d) in even if they were right at the time. When asked I will say I voted "yes", but will defend vigorously my fellow pilots right to vote "no".
To back it up, I'm going to admit to some of my mistakes:
Voted for Perot in 92
Voted for Bush in 00
Voted for Bush in 04
In discussions about how Iraq has been handled, even though I am not happy about it, I admit my vote. Knowing what I know now, I would have changed my vote, but with the information I had at the time alone, I would vote the same way.
Fly Safe.
-JP