The Comair situation is much more complicated than you make it out to be. Before I was hired, the pilots were offered a two-year pay freeze that the then-company president promised would keep us competitive, while also allowing us to secure more airframes. The unions voted to accept the pay freeze, and the company started to acquire some of the airframes. When Delta declared BK, it took Comair with it because Comair was and still is wholly-owned. Now all of a sudden the company starts to demand that all unions take drastic pay cuts because we are supposedly no longer competitive, losing money, and close to closing the doors. 154 pilots get furloughed and the company gives our union a last, best, and final offer that is no different than when they started "negotiating" with us several months prior. The pilots voted it in by a slim margin but the paycut never took effect because the company couldn't get the drastic pay cuts it wanted from the FAs.
Here we are now, 10 months after the company said we would be out of business if we didn't take pay cuts, and now the tone has changed to "take these pay cuts or lose some airplanes". The company's paycut dollar amount has not changed. So let's summarize: first it was we'd be competitive well into the future for a short term pay freeze, then the company is going to liquidate, now the company may lose some airplanes. Amazing how management keeps changing its story, isn't it?
Some may disagree with the pilot union voting for the paycut earlier this year, and some may disagree with the position that our union is taking now (not offering another vote to the pilots), but the point is we have representatives looking out for the pilots and they are doing what the can to protect our livelihoods. If we didn't have a union, the company simply would have imposed the paycuts it wanted (over 20% for most FOs, and big cuts for captains as well). With a union, the pilot group as a whole has the chance to decide what direction we want to take - either take pay cuts and hope for the best, or don't take pay cuts and hope for the best. Unfortunately in our situation, management is not negotiating in a fair manner and our company as a whole is suffering as a result. It's my opinion that the pilot group would like to see the continued success of Comair, but we are not willing to take a leap of faith considering the over-reaching demands from our management with no guarantees of job security.
As for your question about if you want to be at the same company in ten years, the only way to guarantee that is get out of aviation. I guess there's always a place here if you don't mind being the cheapest provider of lift, but personally I feel I'm worth more than that. The only way we are going to keep our standards as professionals is to fight for it, because management certainly isn't going to do it for us.