[QUOTE=Jim B.]
A couple of days ago, on Sep. 26, a local Detroit tv station took an informal poll. Would you like to be in a union, if you could, they asked. About 60% said, no, they would not like to join a union if they could and only about 40% said yes.
I know unions are going down hill now. But I always thought people wanted to join them if they could. What am I missing here?
Unions fight for your rights. They make working conditions more favorable. They make it harder for your boss to fire you. All good things. Also, my aunt, who was an avid supporter of unions and whose husband belonged to one, said all the good things people take for granted now in the workplace, like medical benefits, for example, are there because unions fought for them.
I am going to get off my soap box now to ask the simple question I have in this thread: Why wouldn’t someone want to join a union?
[/QUOTE]
Well, the question was pretty open-ended, and will probably be taken by most people as a referendum on “are unions good or bad?”
To the general public, unions are often seen as
- A nuisance,
- Representative of workers with a reputation for laziness (government workers can be almost supernaturally lazy) entitlement, and greed, and
- Prone to irritating political stances; in a famous recent case, the Canadian public service union suddenly passed a resolution calling for a boycott of Israel (where did that come from) and went so far as to hold the vote on Saturday so no observant Jews would be there.
Unions generally get into the news when it’s bad PR; public service unions defending lazy and worthless employees, professional sports unions whining over marginal differences in bazillion-dollar contracts, and, currently in the news, giant unions and a giant corporation squabbling over the bones of a dying business (GM.)
The GOOD things unions do don’t make the news because they aren’t news, and their positive impacts are largely preventive in nature. Unions are by nature collective, and exist to protect the individual from exploitation. “Local worker not unjustifiably dismissed because a union was in place” can’t be on the news, because it isn’t news. “Montreal public service union appeals dismissal of worker who deliberately ran over his supervisor with a truck” IS news (and that really did happen.)
So you can ask the question “would you join a union or not?” but the question people will ANSWER is “do you like unions?” and, for the most part, their impressionis negative. If you actually put someone in a parti0cular job and gave them a choice between joining the union or not, they’d usually join, no matter whatr that poll says. I’m sure a loudmouth or two - hell, I know who they’ll be - will come in and deny this, and in most cases there always WILL be people who opt out, and in some cases it’s logical to do. But most of the time people would opt in to the union because most of the time it’s the easy and/or logical choice in that circumstance.