T-Gates said:
To say that no freight would move during the strike is not a correct statement. In 1997, UPS closed the offices of management and asked management types to go to work driving trucks all over the country. A tiny fraction of the cargo moved, but some did nonetheless. I know most of the feeders (non union) flew cargo in and out of SDF during the strike. None of theese men ended up on a scab list.
I hope I didn't say "no frieight would move." I've tried to qualify in each instance that TEAMSTERS would move no freight. If I missed one, I apologize. No Teamsters moved freight in 1997. The IPA honored the 1997 Teamsters strike. If the IPA strikes, UPS Teamsters will honor that strike as well.
I am aware that managers worked through the UPS Teamsters strike of 1997 to move a tiny fraction of their freight. To the best of my knowledge, their efforts only went so far as to deliver the highly perishable and/or valuable freight that was in the system when the strike began. I may be mistaken about the scope of their efforts, but that's immaterial. The point, one more time, is - - UPS Teamsters will honor an IPA strike.
I'm not familiar with specifics of contractor flying during 1997. I can only offer this thought: from the perspective of a pilot, honoring the Teamsters picket line and honoring an IPA picket line are subtly different. In '97, Teamsters were striking, and IPA was honoring the strike. Any injury done by contract flyers was done to Teamsters. Their efforts were not threatened by a fleet of Lears. Add to this the question of whether those charters would have been flown by IPA pilots in the first place, and you have a very complex scenario to reconstruct. Have you eaten any Diamond brand canned or bagged walnuts or walnut pieces lately? If so, you're guilty of disregarding a boycott, but not of scabbing. The same applies for R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. cigarettes (Best Value, Camel, Century, Doral, Eclipse, Magna, Monarch, More, Now, Salem, Sterling, Vantage, and Winston), Echostar Dish Network, and Black Entertainment Television (BET cable television, Action pay-per-view, and BET on Jazz) as well as the Big League Theatricals Road Company performance of "Miss Saigon." (More at
www.unionlabel.org - Boycott List)
Let's for a moment assume that those flying the charters in '97 were indeed by all rights deserving of the label "scab." (I said assume, so don't bother arguing why they shouldn't. Just follow along for a second, OK?) Let's also say that they got away with it, and nobody knows, and nobody ever will know. They might be sitting right next to an IPA pilot in a UPS cockpit at this very moment, and nobody's the wiser. So what? Does that mean it will be OK in the future to scab? Does that mean that the '97 scab will jump in and defend a 2005 scab by pointing out that HE scabbed back then, and he's OK, so the 2005 scab is OK, too? Does that make the '97 scab immune himself to scabbing in 2005? Not hardly. What happened then is of no matter. (OK, relax, hypothetical over.

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In the event of an IPA strike, I believe IPA will make it very simple to identify struck work, and will make the ramifications of flying struck work very clear.
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