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brorfred | 5 years ago

Free market idealists also tend to be very against the natural way for workers to consolidate and leverage negotiation power: trade unions.

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black_puppydog|5 years ago

Yeah, I never understood how "free everything" advocates tend to be so much against the freedom of the individual to refer decisions/actions to a collective when that happens to be the better course of action.

D895n9o33436N42|5 years ago

“Free market” isn’t “free everything”. In a free market the bid-ask spread is king. It’s just another kind of tyranny, which, like all such things, benefits those who are set up to take advantage of it, and leaves most others in the dust.

floor2|5 years ago

Maybe your lack of understanding is because you're arguing against an imaginary straw man?

A group forming a collective and negotiating as such fits perfectly fine with free market ideals. This exists in many forms that all manner of libertarian, free-market, whatever label people are OK with.

When that group uses violence, threats and coercion to their benefit is where people object. Examples - blocking an employer from hiring non-union employees, harming or threatening to harm workers during a strike, forcing people to join a union to get/keep a job, preventing new workers or new firms from entering the market through regulation, etc.

If you want to say "You can hire these 20 union workers at a rate of $$$, we all stand together" that's fine. When you say "You need to hire these 20 union workers, and if you don't, we'll surround your business and threaten, harass and intimidate the people you hire instead" is where you've jumped into violence and extortion rather than free market negotiation.

bluGill|5 years ago

Not exactly. We are against the way unions are implemented and make work not a free market. I'm not against your union so longs as I can decide not to join and still have equal work with you.

zackmorris|5 years ago

Your thinking is a fallacy, because a union uses the same principle that the republican party uses to maintain control: solidarity.

I'm curious why you would want to opt out of a union in the first place, since unions generally double workers' wages. I live in the right to work state of Idaho, which has some of the lowest wages in the country, especially for things like farm work. I realize that this is a bit of a straw man argument though, which doesn't touch your main point.

I'm having trouble thinking of a case where a union charges more in fees than it provides in additional wages, benefits and other protections. So I think my main point is that you are fixated on a motivation that doesn't exist. It's like being angry that you must pay for a stamp to mail something through the post office, even though that costs a fraction of what UPS or FedEx cost. You're free to work somewhere else or use those other services.

Maybe someone else can answer this better than I can. I really do want to understand why unions are so controversial, because I've only experienced the downside of not having them. Like when I was moving furniture 20 years ago and the warehouse charged $34/hr and only paid us $10/hr, even though we were doing all of the work. My feeling is that had we been unionized, we would have made at least $17/hr.

YeGoblynQueenne|5 years ago

The way I interpret what you say is that you'd like to have the benefits of being in a union, without being in a union. If that's the case (otherwise, sorry for misrepresenting your views) I don't see how that can work. How are a bunch of independent individuals going to secure their common rights without collaborating with each other?

michael1999|5 years ago

What is a corporation but a union of capitalists? Why must only the owners be allowed to unite for better outcomes?

WoodenChair|5 years ago

I think people in this thread are confusing "free market idealists" (usually libertarians) with conservatives/Republicans. A free market idealist has no problem with a free labor market that self-organizes into unions as long as the government doesn't mandate unionization. Conservatives and Republicans tend to advocate for big business and have therefore a natural antipathy towards organized labor.

joncrocks|5 years ago

I would also presume that in addition a `free market idealist` would also want to ensure that Unions aren't given any special status, and that employers could also come together to agree wages.

missedthecue|5 years ago

A union is, in an economic sense, a cartel. Their job is to restrict supply of labour so that the price they can demand for it increases, making their members more money. This is why it takes over a year to join the plumbers or electricians union in many states and why it takes over 10 years to join the longshoremens union.

I am against all cartels as a matter of principle, be they the ILWU or OPEC.

sukilot|5 years ago

OK. I'm against corporations as matter of principle. A corporation is also a cartel.

nfuiosdjkafndaj|5 years ago

Comments like these are why I've moved to Blind for more quality discussions.