quote]
> MM,
>
> First, bad move to take something directly off our union board and put it on here. For someone who claims to put a lot of thought into these things, you've already muddied your credibility with this little slip.
Realtyman, the quote I started my post with is the "drumbeat" of NJASAP. It was uttered in many forms in many places. The quote was not attributed to anyone, or any post. It is the essence of the allure of "going it alone".
>
> Second, although it may sound heartless, I really don't care to fund the trucker's fight.
Realtyman, you may not want to fund the truckers' fight, but you miss a very important truth: labor must stick together. While many love to think that they can pull everyone UP by pushing wages higher and higher, history will reveal that those on the lower levels are much more liable to drag everyone DOWN. This was ALPA's founding flaw. They tried an elitist approach to unionization. This flaw saw fruition in the "let them eat cake" attitude toward the cargo carriers and commuters.
The simple fact remains, there are one hellova lot more truckers than fractional pilots. We have far more to gain by joining forces with them than by eschewing them. In the big picture of enacting favorable labor laws and getting a fair shake in a court of law, we need to join forces, not discriminate against one another based on what type of vehicle we drive.
>
> And as has already been mentioned, the mere fact that IBT has to represent the interests of the 121 >carriers puts it directly at odds with the goals of the fracs. So how does that help us exactly?
We have far more in common with 121 carriers than we have in conflict when it comes to public policy.
> We've had pilots fired and IBT didn't lift a finger, not even their little toe, to help them. It was done all >on our own, with our own money and determination.
Realtyman, do you actually believe that national would get involved in an "in-house" problem? National is not there to do our work. National is there to further our goals on the national level. They will not and should not interfere in events that are local in nature. For example, ALPA sets "merger policy", but it does not take sides in mergers. Such would be inappropriate.
> Where was the IBT support during our 2005 negotiations? IBB? How about even some >aknowledgment of our victories in their magazine?
As important as 1108 is to every one of us, 1108 is a bump on the elephant's hide. We may be a shining example of how to run a local, but we are still just one local amongst many.
> Have you heard a single word Bill O. and others have said about what's happened almost every time we've asked for support?
>
> I suppose I wouldn't mind sending them money everyday if we even saw some tiny little return on that investment.
>
> And as week as labor may be getting, we have shown forth brightly to take charge of our own destiny at NJA, ON OUR OWN without any support from IBT!
>
> Send em packing!!
Realtyman, I think you will see a very successful campaign to "send them packing". De-organizing (dis-organizing?) labor isn't all that tough. The laws of entropy are on our side. NJASAP will be our bargaining unit by the end of the year.
Down the road, when all the barriers that organized labor has errected have fallen and big money is having its way with labor, we will realize that we need those lowly truckers; those auto workers, those fast food workers, everyone who gets an hourly wage. The re-organziation will not take place quickly, but it will eventually take place if labor is to protect itself.
My question is, why are we distroying what little unity we have already? Wouldn't it be better to fix it without de-construction?
This is an issue that I'd like every pilot to think about since, much as we hate to admit it, we are labor. We need each other.