Horatio Yed wrote:
I'm 32, this is waaay before my time when like i said previously the unions had noble intentions…
But now they don’t/now they’re not needed, right?
Now, for instance, when an employer wants to slash the pay of people, they should bend over backwards to allow it to happen? After all, if they can’t pay the bills, then it’s their own fault, eh?
And before you comment, this is happening right now, in various places across the UK, and is not just about high-paid workers, but those on low wages too.
Horatio Yed wrote:
No i don't, what's your point?
You mentioned a strike. You didn’t mention which one or what it was about. Were you referring to 30 November?
Horatio Yed wrote:
If i don't like my job and i think i'm worth more in both wages and respect i'll look for a job that fits those needs rather than moan about how shitty my job is and how i don't get enough money blah blah, have i benefited from union negotiations on my pay, yes i have but i was happy with them originally, if i wasn't i wouldn't have worked for them and looked elsewhere.
Because jobs are 10 a penny …
Horatio Yed wrote:
… 2 wrongs don't make a right, instead of fighting for better more unsustainable conditions, fight for lower wages for the fat cats at the top or a fairer distribution of company wealth(yes i sound mildly contradictory on this).
What ‘wrong’? In the case of 30- November, fighting for the retention of
sustainable pension schemes, instead of agreeing to pay more money out of one’s own wages to pay off the bankers’ gambling debts?
Horatio Yed wrote:
Why do i need to? For some moral crusade? i can afford at least another 7-8 years on the pay i'm on without a payrise quite comfortably, if it doesn't go up soon i'm not worried.
You’re the lucky one. Many can’t. But who cares about them, eh?
Horatio Yed wrote:
What do Lollipop ladies do …
Protect children – a worthless role, I admit.
Horatio Yed wrote:
… work in the road and hold a stick should that be decent pay?
Any job should be paid decently. Or are you really going to suggest that someone who goes out to work should not be paid decently?
Horatio Yed wrote:
… teachers are subjective but aren't they striking over pensions not wages …
On 30 November, nobody was striking over wages. It was all about pensions. – Not: ‘we want bigger pensions’, but simply ‘ we want the pensions we signed up to and pay into and don’t want top have to more to pay off the deficit’.
Other actions are taking place because councils and charities are slashing wages. But at least you wouldn’t have to worry about such things, so why worry about anyone else?
Horatio Yed wrote:
… one thing i don't understand with certain professions is that they were jobs they wanted since childhood, they wanted to pass their knowledge if they wanted to teach or doctors wanted to save lives, they didn't grow up thinking i want to be a doctor because of the good pension plan, now all of a sudden that's the most important issue?
Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear. For many people, they accepted working for lower pay in the public sector rather than the private because they wanted to do a job that benefited society, as you mention. One of the compensations was a decent – not ‘gold-plated’ – but decent pension.
This has been understood for a very, very long time. And just because someone does something that they feel a vocation for doesn’t mean you screw them into poverty in retirement.
Horatio Yed wrote:
So that's the only job in the service is it?
There aren’t many step-down jobs, no. Just as there aren’t if you’re a nurse.
Horatio Yed wrote:
… Ok i'll let you in on my last position in my current job, my position was to report colleagues and all their misdemeanors and the unions job was to try and get them off, even though the people i had reported were doing things detrimental to the company, we had many repeat offenders and the union defended them knowing that the people they were defending were lazy feckless and workshy, they also convinced their members to go on a futile strike and actually lost them money in bonuses even though all managerial positions had their money frozen for 2 years they actually striked for more money?
I bet you’d believe that people who go to court shouldn’t be allowed representation either – if you’ve decided already that they’re guilty.
Horatio Yed wrote:
Minty with her emotive ballcocks twisting an argument i didn't even put out, i've not said they are work shy or scum.
As opposed to: “The majority of public sector workers are overpaid and are simply not value for money...”
How do you work out the value of social care, eh? In financial terms? Or of saving a child from abuse? Let’s get down to brass tacks – what is the financial value of teaching children? Y’know – not the human value, just the financial value.?
I’m afraid this utterly illustrates what’s wrong with this country – the cult of the individual, the cult of greed and the cult of nothing matters except money.
Horatio Yed wrote:
If you don't like the job you're in train for something else, i did.
How long does it take to train to be a paid snitch?