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Something I Don't Understand
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<blockquote data-quote="Brown287" data-source="post: 745069" data-attributes="member: 14940"><p>If Fred S is such an upstanding human being and his compensation and treatment are of the highest standard, then what does FedEx have to loose giving their empolyees the option to unionize? The fact that this company has and is spending millions upon millions of dollars fighting this issue says everything. Is the idea of many barganing for better a deal through the power of numbers un-ethical. I would like to point out that companies do this each and everyday through the power of associations, using the power of numbers to better negotiate deals from everything from trucks for farmers, mechanics prices for Bbsam Ground vehicles and even shipping rates through both FedEx and UPS. You see this idea of collective barganing is used everyday by the same companies who apparently are against collective barganing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brown287, post: 745069, member: 14940"] If Fred S is such an upstanding human being and his compensation and treatment are of the highest standard, then what does FedEx have to loose giving their empolyees the option to unionize? The fact that this company has and is spending millions upon millions of dollars fighting this issue says everything. Is the idea of many barganing for better a deal through the power of numbers un-ethical. I would like to point out that companies do this each and everyday through the power of associations, using the power of numbers to better negotiate deals from everything from trucks for farmers, mechanics prices for Bbsam Ground vehicles and even shipping rates through both FedEx and UPS. You see this idea of collective barganing is used everyday by the same companies who apparently are against collective barganing. [/QUOTE]
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