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<blockquote data-quote="barnyard" data-source="post: 1067551" data-attributes="member: 13921"><p>Which you know because you do read. Some people just read the headlines and for those that just listen to exploding head radio, well, they KNOW that the unions are to blame. The problem is that the union does not talk about their benefits in ways that a person that hears it will say, "Good job." All they talk about is the 'war with business.' Just once, I would like to hear a union leader, at a press conference say, "We are working with our partners in business" or something like that.</p><p></p><p>In another note....</p><p></p><p>The other morning on the way to work, NPR did a story on 'right to work' and talked about the origins of the phrase. Turns out, it is credited with a journalist that wrote about the union movement in 1902 and looked at unions as a blockade to jobs. Interesting to me that a phrase coined in 1902 still gets traction 110 years later.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="barnyard, post: 1067551, member: 13921"] Which you know because you do read. Some people just read the headlines and for those that just listen to exploding head radio, well, they KNOW that the unions are to blame. The problem is that the union does not talk about their benefits in ways that a person that hears it will say, "Good job." All they talk about is the 'war with business.' Just once, I would like to hear a union leader, at a press conference say, "We are working with our partners in business" or something like that. In another note.... The other morning on the way to work, NPR did a story on 'right to work' and talked about the origins of the phrase. Turns out, it is credited with a journalist that wrote about the union movement in 1902 and looked at unions as a blockade to jobs. Interesting to me that a phrase coined in 1902 still gets traction 110 years later. [/QUOTE]
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