Purple said:
I think this is a sinister move by teachers trade unions. Has anyone any info on how many/ any children went to the protests.
Yes, I saw about 3 groups of students in uniform, about 40 to 50 in total I'd guess. There may have been more...hard to see all parts of the demo. They seemed to be in good spirits and enjoying the occasion like everybody else. No sinister mind control by teachers was in evidence.
Anecdotally, I believe they were from schools that had closed early for the day. AFAIK No schools/teachers brought or made arrangements for pupils to attend - insurance issues etc.
purple said:
Not one person in my company asked to go or took the day off to go.
fair enough..... presumably they're all delighted to have such an exemplary employer who treats them all with complete fairness and honesty all the time....hope it lasts
purple said:
These sort of publicity stunts by the unions are treated with derision and contempt by most people working in private sector that I have talked to.
Fair enough, I suppose your private sector acquaintances must not be representative of the tens of thousands of private sector workers on the march.
purple said:
All of the reasons why this is a red herring and is not the thin end of the wedge etc, has been outlined above by various posters. Those who do not see this choose not to see because reality doesn't fit in with their political beliefs.
Or could it possibly be because they have an analysis of society and ethics that differs from yours? This doesn't make them wrong, you know, just different.
purple said:
Irish trade unions sold out the poor years ago. They sold out low paid workers at the same time.
Really? Trade unions have fought for, and achieved, the highest minimum wage in Europe, lower taxes - particularly for the lower paid, and improved employee rights legislation. The minimum wage in particular, didn't just fall like manna from heaven. It was negotiated through successive partnership agreements, largely by unions whose memberships would earn in excess of it anyway. So much for selling out the poor!
purple said:
They have no interest in really helping to keep low paid and/or manufacturing jobs in this country because doing so would require them to push for wage moderation and a more business friendly environment.
An extraordinary argument!! Wage moderation helps the low paid, huh? Jeez, how could trade unions have got it so wrong all these years looking for
increased wages to offset poverty? And all along, they just had to look for more moderation in wages, tut, tut, so simple
I must explain that one to the lads down in ICTU!! And a more business friendly environment too? Presumably you mean less of that tiresome legislation that actually gives RIGHTS to the working classes. Yes, far too good for the likes of them! I suppose that we can just trust the Gama/Irish Ferries of this world to offer secure employment to the poor if we lift the "burden" of state regulation off their backs?
purple said:
100 jobs a week are going in manufacturing, the traditional home of the trade union, and they are doing nothing about it because things like benchmarking and the realities of what that does to the cost base of the economy does not fit in with their real public sector agenda.
The only "agenda" trade unions operate to is to increase the long term, sustainable, pay and conditions of employment of all their members, public and private sector. Nothing hidden about that! I can assure you that private sector unions are every bit as effective as their public sector counterparts in doing this.