Making sweet passionate secks in the dumpster out behind Wendy's?
If you get that reference I will give you a dollar.
I would contend that a capitalist economy is apathetic to the desires of corporations and simply no longer exists when government decides to cater to those desires. It is, I contend, ONLY government that can allow corporations to achieve unnatural economic occurrences like monopoly.
I would also contend that there is a natural morality to the markets that makes profit-maximization dependent upon corporate responsibility. The best example is BP - if BP doesn't fill the gulf with oil, their profits for their year increase 20 billion dollars (the government imposed escrow fund only serves to make it simple to place a figure on the cost clean up, not a demonstration of the necessity of government intervention. Without government enforcement BP would still be legally liable and their world-standing would depend on their reaction to oil clean up) + the potential profits they would have earned if their image was not tarnished with the spill + the destruction of value in the billions BP has spent on PR campaigns over the past years (no American consumer connects BP with their pre-spill commercials, rendering the investment void).
Therefore if a corporation wishes to maximize profits, they won't spill oil in the gulf.
Now it is only through government intervention that they can avoid these costs. With the government's endorsement of BP's response, consumers are less likely to make their own judgments. With the lobbyist forged tax code, BP was able to apply for billions in corporate-friendly tax credits. With government imposed liability caps, BP had the possibility of avoiding the costs of their actions. Many in and out of government expressed concerned for innocent BP shareholders and the need to protect their investment when it seems to me that forcing BP shareholders to bare the consequences of BP's actions would serve to encourage the shareholders of other companies to be more curious in the practices of their invested companies, understanding that their investment is not invulnerable and dependent upon competent management.
Only governments can enable corporations to revoke free markets, that is why government must stay completely out of the economy.
The Courts system will fix issues of Fraud.
Last month, Ohio Gov. John Kasich (R) said that if employees strike, they should be fired, and former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R) wrote in an op-ed that the moral case for unions does not apply to public employment. Now, facing a $137 million budget deficit, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has proposed a budget repair bill that would severely limit collective bargaining, eliminate the right of unions to negotiate pensions, retirement and benefits. Walker is facing fierce criticism for this all-out assault against state workers, especially after he insisted that the National Guard will be used against a walkout:
When asked by a reporter what will happen if workers resist, Walker replied that he would call out the National Guard. He said that the National Guard is prepared for whatever the governor, their commander-in-chief, might call for. I am fully prepared for whatever may happen.
The mention of the National Guard in Walker's Friday news conference was specifically in reference to state prisons. He said he would call out the Guard to take control of prisons if Corrections Officers went on strike or took any other sort of job action. Union officials say they don't have any plans to. One union official said the governor was "baiting" guards. Walkers bill would maintain the workers' ability to negotiate over pay and only over pay -- it would strip them of their rights to negotiate any other benefits or work rules. Any raises couldn't exceed inflation, all contracts would be limited to one year and employees would be required to vote every year on whether to recertify the union as their bargaining agent.
Misleading phrasing with the "National Guard will be used against a walkout". If the question is using the National Guard to cover prisons in case of strike, I say go Governor Badger.
Just like I applaud Kasich's response and I applaud Pawlenty's response. (Not that I endorse either men)
If legislators are allowed to shut down the government, pay their employees with IOU's, or even lock them out, then public employees should be allowed to strike (especially if they have collective barganing agreements).
I think that legislators shouldn't be allowed to do that.
Although I can't argue that point, it does happen. The ability to strike is a natural right and the only way to circumvent it is to have the person give that right up. If there is a no strike clause in their contract, then that is where they wouldn't have the right to strike. This is what happened in the mid 1950's with the airtraffic controllers union. Some 20 some odd years later, they struck and Regan fired them for breach of contract (in a nutshell). That was plausible since they were under contract not to strike (and had given up that right in the process).
If they are private sector employees, they can strike as many times as they want to for all I care. But considering how we need police officers, firemen, teachers, etc., public sector employees shouldn't be allowed to strike. Also considering how public sector employee strikes have crippled several European nations for days on end, is another reason why they shouldn't be allowed.
That said, considering that private sector employers don't pay in IOUs, usually have to give their employees notice that they're shutting down, etc. The government should be held to the same standards. And in return for outlawing public sector employee strikes, they should treat their employees like decent human beings so that there would be no reason to strike to begin with.
Sounds like common sense to me.
No one has a right to strike, either. An employer should have the right to fire striking workers just as easily as a government does.