What?
Publishers...
About the only cohesive thought I get from your posts, and this could be my fault, is that you think pilot unions, and ALPA in particular are flawed beyond use. That all labor groups for an airline should be represented by the same union. And somehow, the airline business would be better off this way.
I humbly disagree.
While ALPA does have it's "warts" as Hugh says, it does in the long run represent the issues of the pilots better than say the TWU, APFA or AFA, CWA or any other labor union, no insult meant toward APA or SWAPA or any other stand alone. The fact that the flight attendants, mechanics and pilots all have different unions serves to prove that they all have different issues that need to be considered during negotiations, or arbitrations if you work for Eagle.
The company I work for has lied, cheated and stolen from all of it's workers. This has been proven by the arbitrations we have won and the compensation we have recieved. While it is normal for opposing groups to differ, in this industry it's normal for fraud and worse to happen. Hence, the need for the union.
Without the Union, Carty would have given himself a bigger raise after 9/11 along with his $400,000 stock purchase. APA caught him at his game and exposed him, forcing him to quit in an effort to maintain some integrity for American Management.
At Eagle, we have over 300 pending grievances. Most airlines don't come close to that, but it speaks volumes about labor relations in this arena.
If a union goes through all the flaming hoops to get to the point of self-help, and votes to strike, then it is truly a failure of both sides to come to an agreement. It is a long and difficult road that must be traveled before a union takes it's pilots out of the aircraft. When that happens, for anyone to show disrespect for the efforts they have made and the sacrifices they are making by crossing a picket line, deserves to be bannished.
You heard of the USAir executives pay incentive for getting a bonus at the expense of the other employees. It's not unusual. Many managers get a bonus if they operate within their budget. Few are as flagrantly disrespectful of the front line laborer as that example.
Contradictions? Maybe. There are many in this business. Where else do you find so many ardent union-members that are anxious to vote for a president that signed a "right-to-work" law while the governor of Texas? We're not perfect, but we're good at what we do. None of us want to bankrupt the companies we work for, but we do want to be paid a wage that reflects the training and responsibility we have. I'd love to see Carty and Mullin fighting over who was going to sleep in a refrigerator box on a cold night in Chicago. I'd love to think that we could all learn from Carnegie Steel and Pinkerton Security. We don't always remember our past and Carty would kick his butt.
I can't imagine a scenario where a weaker or non-existant union would be better for pilots.