The National Labor Relations Board (nlrb.gov) is a federal agency created to monitor and administer federal laws that govern the relationship between labor unions and business owners and corporations and to this board, Barack Obama has appointed as its chair a woman that does not seem to believe much in individual freedom but seems more interested in collectivism. To you and me that might be considered a communist ideal, but even if she doesn’t take it that far it is certainly an adversarial idea to individual freedom and the rights of business.
Last week, Obama named to the NLRB Wilma Liebman, a Philadelphian that has served on the legal staff of two labor unions: the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (1980-1989) and the International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftsmen (1990-1993).
As the NRW’s freedom@work blog points out, Liebman has previously been known to make some rather startling statements.
[A]n exclusive orientation toward an individual-rights regime could have troubling political and social consequences. Workers may view the employment relationship in purely individual terms and may fail to grasp common economic interests and the potential of collective action at work, as well as in the public sphere. Collective action at work encourages engagement in the community and in politics. Without a functioning collective bargaining system, fundamental economic issues are placed off the table: distribution of wealth, control, and direction of economic enterprises. What institution will be as effective in efforts to minimize the randomness of fortune of democratic capitalism? And without a strong independent trade union movement, what institution will stand effectively as a counterweight in our democracy to the growing political influence of corporations? What institution will speak for working people–indeed for the middle class–as effectively?
It is glaringly obvious that Liebman does not think the individual worker is smart enough to be able to deal with his employers. And, worse, it seems that Liebman has no intention of allowing the worker to even have the chance to experience that freedom of individual choice but is rather more interested in supplanting such messy freedoms with total collectivism.
This seems to point to an NLRB chair that will advocate for the side of labor no matter what else is going on, doesn’t it? How can a person that is so blatantly biased in favor of big labor be expected to run an unbiased watchdog agency that is supposed to fairly deal with both sides?
Will Liebman be able to set aside her past activism and close associations with big labor to administer the federal agency to which she has been assigned?
I don’t see how she could, myself.
Steve Maley
KnightsofMalta
Unions must realize
Deskpilot (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 5:44AM EST (link)that a business has NO obligation other than to make a profit for its shareholders. The moment it doesn’t, usually because of costs, out comes the knife. If a union business closes for lack of profit, (SEIU infested hotel perhaps) there is no commitment on the part of the owner to stay in business, and therefore no guatantee of a job.
I this current economy, EVERY union will do EVERYTHING in their thuggish power to keep their maniacal grip over business in order to present themselves as the savior to their members in order to keep the dues flowing in to keep the votes flowing out.
If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you can still read it in English, You’re Welcome
Deskpilot, AM(H)1 (AW), USN (Ret)
Join the RedState Strike Force
If unions are so smart
izoneguy (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 8:04AM EST (link)why don’t they start & own their own business’s?
The point cannot be made often enough: Modern liberalism, as embodied in the Obama presidency, is the defender of the status quo. And the status quo is a road to economic ruin. Political forces cannot redistribute the wealth that the economic system does not produce.
Easier
Warner Todd Huston (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 8:09AM EST (link)It’s easier to steal someone else’s hard work, ya know?
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Yep, no respect for the entrepreneur
izoneguy (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 8:45AM EST (link)Obama has none and now clear signals are being sent from Washington. Entrepreneur’s need not apply. I am waiting
for an Obama edict that freezes employee levels so companies cannot fire anymore people.
The point cannot be made often enough: Modern liberalism, as embodied in the Obama presidency, is the defender of the status quo. And the status quo is a road to economic ruin. Political forces cannot redistribute the wealth that the economic system does not produce.
They ARE businesses and quite successful ones.
Achance (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 8:43AM EST (link)It ain’t bad duty to be very well paid, live very well on an expensive account, have all sorts of perks, and have somebody else do all the work and pay you just to be alive. I think it is fair to say that the union makes more off most unionized businesses than the business does.
In Vino Veritas
I thought it would take a little longer
beaming Tuesday, January 27th at 5:55AM EST (link)than a week for this administration to show it’s true colors. Wilma Liebman is not the first to use “collective” to describe their program.
At this rate, with the republicans on board with everything the socialists want [ it's safe to call them that isn't ] in 4 years their plan will be so intrenched it will be hard to reverse.
It would not surprise me at all if the Democrats changed their party name to Democratic Socialist Party for the 2012 election right after term limits for president are eliminated.
Does anyone remember those ESPN commercials?
devCharles Tuesday, January 27th at 6:31AM EST (link)You know, the ones that are like “This is where football lives.”
All I could think was, “This is where conflict of interest lives.”
“If you analyze it I believe the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism.” – Ronald Regan
Botox
10ksnooker (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 8:41AM EST (link)It’s used as a repellent to rational thought.
No Democrat ever has a conflict of interest.
She'll work well with Labor Secretary Solis
bk (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 8:50AM EST (link)The SEIU for example is pleased with — no, make that more like ecstatis over — the Solis nomination.
grrr - ecstatic - I hate typos
bk (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 8:51AM EST (link)This is her THIRD term on the NLRB.
Achance (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 8:54AM EST (link)Which means GWB could have removed her a couple of times and didn’t. That fact should concern Republicans more than BHO’s appointing her as chair. Actually, coming from trade unions and the FMCS probably means she more conservative and rational than the run of the SEIU/AFSCME types. Wait and see who gets appointed to the vacancies if you think this one is a socialist.
In Vino Veritas
Confessions of a Republican unionist
boomer (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 10:33AM EST (link)This is a good point–she could be worse. We can’t just approach this with the simple-minded “Unions bad, companies good” mentality. I’ve had some jobs where companies treat their people very cavalierly, and I was glad for the union, believe me. I live around Philly, and the average blue-collar worker doesn’t think “I have a job because of my company” he thinks “I have a job because I’m in the union.” And he has a point– how many of the people running big companies today are really the entrepreneurs who founded the company and risked their own money? Most of them are just MBAs who are, at most,, risking their reputations. If we ever want to, say, win PA again we have to take this outllook into account.
Too true, boomer.
Achance (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 10:43AM EST (link)The last twenty years or so have given a lot of examples of good, profitable companies coming under the control of some gunslinger CEO who does the reorganization dance to run the stock value up, he and his buddies dump the stock when the price is highest, then just let the company collapse as they walk away.
The story is always labor costs and taxation or some such explanation that makes Republican legs tingle, but as often as not it is just a get-rich scheme by the management who specialize in shucking companies and leaving a dead husk in their wake.
I can’t think of an MBA that I’ve had to work with that I liked. I don’t know what they put in the water at the Biz Schools but the last few months have demonstrated to me that something is very much awry in business education in this Country. Corporate managers are starting to make lawyers look good.
In Vino Veritas
So it really comes back to personal morality and personal discipline in the end
civil truth (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 11:02AM EST (link)If people in positions of power and leadership can restrain their appetites and really look after the interests of the others whom their positions of trust entail the duty to do, then businesses will flourish with a minimum of laws (beyond which, laws will just get in the way).
Conversely, if people succumb to an ethic of “I’m going to grab as much for myself as I can, to hell with the long-term and those under me” and deliberately push behavior under the ethic “Everything is legitimate unless it’s explicitly illegal” or even”It’s okay unless I get caught and my lawyer can’t extricate me from the consequences”, then no system of laws, no matter how pervasive and how complex, will prevent abuse.
I’m not trying to be too simplistic, but successful human interactions depends to a significant extent on common moral understandings – which is the basis of trust. Laws set boundaries to limit infractions, but canot create that moral framework from scratch.
And we’re in a downward spiral with our ever expanding web of laws coming out of our legislatures that is as likely (or even more likely) to trap the good man as to restrain the evildoer.
The greatest evil…is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clean, carpeted, warmed, and well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voice. Hence, naturally enough, my symbol for Hell is something like the bureaucracy of a police state or the offices of a thoroughly nasty business concern. -C.S. Lewis
http://www.gmsplace.com/
Much of the business culture seems devoid
Achance (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 11:42AM EST (link)of personal morality and personal discipline. I mean, in the face of all that’s allegedly going on in the economy and in the face of nearly a trillion in OPM to “save” their sorry butts, they’re buying $50MM corporate jets – until they got caught and backed off – and doing million dollar remodels of one guy’s office. Hell, real people, real well off people, could remodel a good size office building with a million buchs and this guy is buying $85K area rugs. Kowalski’s right we need to have some 9mm Brain Hemorages.
In Vino Veritas
Ah yes, the other 30's model of governance: the USSR
civil truth (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 1:00PM EST (link)While FDR was introducing his socialist program to reform corporate America, good ol’ Joe was executing his “corporate reform” program via 9mm brain hemorrages, as you so succinctly put it.
It takes two to tango: and if our corporate mindset doesn’t shape up, they will provide the ammunition for the hard-core neo-Stalinists in our ruling Democratic government to bring in a dictatorship – and they will not have anyone else to blame when they find themselves in gulag basements suffering fom acute (hot) lead poisoning.
Unfortunately, the rest of U.S. won’t be in good shape either, and perhaps we’ll have no more “U” at that point.
The greatest evil…is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clean, carpeted, warmed, and well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voice. Hence, naturally enough, my symbol for Hell is something like the bureaucracy of a police state or the offices of a thoroughly nasty business concern. -C.S. Lewis
http://www.gmsplace.com/
I have always maintained that no union could organize
Achance (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 2:14PM EST (link)an employer but all it took was one lousy supervisor to organize one. And it isn’t the tough, demanding boss that causes the employees to turn to the union collectively. That tough boss might cause one or a small group to go because he/she was asking more of them than they could or would do, but the rest of the employees will turn on those employees who go to the union. It is the feckless, unpredictable, and unfair supervisor that sends them all into the union’s arms because they want the collective protection. They can’t figure out what the boss really wants, how to get ahead, how to stay out of trouble, so they want rules and want it all written down. In the public sector you see generally bad morale and productivity under Democrats. The Ds give the unions what they want, but the fecklessness of Democrat rule and the special dealing both real and perceived just destroys the morale and you get the old Soviet attitude of, “they pretend to pay me and I pretend to work.”
In Vino Veritas
So a glass of hemlock isn't so bad after all
civil truth (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 1:05PM EST (link)…because the next glass is cyanide?
Lord have mercy if we’ve truly come to this pass.
The greatest evil…is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clean, carpeted, warmed, and well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voice. Hence, naturally enough, my symbol for Hell is something like the bureaucracy of a police state or the offices of a thoroughly nasty business concern. -C.S. Lewis
http://www.gmsplace.com/
I actually preferred dealing with the dedicated socialis/communist
Achance (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 2:20PM EST (link)union rep/organizer. They were logical, methodical, and predictable. They were also capable of assessing their position and making good decisions about compromises. The emotional true believer was extraordinarily hard to deal with because half the time you were protecting the union from itself. On more than one ocassion I’ve called a business manager and said something like, “I really didn’t come here to fire your employees, but if you don’t rein in your union steward I’m going to.”
Where any of them are dangerous, and this one will be too, is if they think they don’t have any effective opposition; they go wild. If you are the opposition, you play on that, lay low, and wait til they do something reprehensible and smash them for it. I don’t think there’s much of that sort of thinking going on on our side of the ditch right now though.
In Vino Veritas
Plenty of thinking, I'm guessing, just not a lot of planning
Finrod (Diary) Tuesday, January 27th at 2:55PM EST (link)It seems like the current Republican plan consists of:
1. Wait for the Democrats to screw up
2. ?
3. Profit! (or, Get Elected!)
Nobody’s stepping up though with anything for step 2 there.
Let’s get down to brass tacks here. How much for the ape?