Townhall…
Strangulation by Union
by John Stossel
Sep 26, 2012
The
Chicago teachers strike is
over, but the public didn't win. Schools will still transfer bad
teachers to
other schools because it's nearly impossible to fire them. When bad
teachers go
from school to school, principals call it "the dance of the lemons."
It would be funny if those teachers didn't slowly wreck children's
lives.
The
basic issue is: Who decides how
to manage a workplace? Unions say it's good that they protect American
workers
from arbitrary dismissal and make sure everyone is treated equally.
But
it's not good.
Rules
that "protect"
government workers from arbitrary dismissal and require everyone be
treated
equally are bad for taxpayers and "customers" -- and even union
workers themselves.
But
this is not intuitive. Union
workers certainly have no clue about it.
At
a union rally, I asked union
workers if it bothered them that slackers are paid as much as good
workers. The
activists actually said, "There is no slacker," and that union rules
mean less productive colleagues are helped, "brought up to speed."
C'mon,
I asked, aren't there some
workers who are just lazy, who drag the enterprise down?
"No!"
they told me.
The
union activists were also quick
to say that unions built the middle class, that without unions, greedy
bosses
would lead a "race to the bottom" and pay workers next to nothing.
"There would be no weekend, or eight-hour day!" they told me.
"All that came from unions!"
Nonsense.
Workers'
lives improved in America
because of free enterprise, not because of union rules…
Read
the rest of the article at
Townhall
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