Le Jacquelope, I’m deleting most of your OP. Great Debates threads need to start with an idea, not a single sentence and a cut-and-paste of a news article.
Whether or not one has sympathy for the strikers depends on what you believe the situation is. Is it that the fatcat bankers and financial people got a bailout that the public has to pay for? Or is it that the European public has gotten used to a welfare state their governments simply can’t afford anymore, and they’re howling at being taken off the teat?
There’s an entirely different philosophy behind the idea of strikes in general in Europe vs. the U.S.
In the U.S. strikes occur by employees against an employer for perceived grievances against the employees.
In Europe strikes occur by workers in general against the government for perceived grievances against all of society.
Obviously that’s a broad brush, but the point is that the idea of a general strike to protest government actions comes naturally to Europeans, but is a strange idea to Americans.
They’ve been at it all summer - Greece was paralysed by a truckers’ strike, France had mass walkouts, and in Britain we tutted loudly and had another cup of tea.
In Greece at least tax evasion and corruption are rampant.
So no, people were not getting a free ride from government programs that nobody imagined how to pay for. If the Greeks paid their taxes they wouldn’t be in this mess in spite of your worry over the nanny state coddling its lazy masses.
Note that these are all public sector union employees, disrupting public services (paid for by tax money) to get more money for themselves out of the state coffers. This is political leverage that private sector employees do not have. Perhaps unsurprisingly, public sector employees areheavily overpaid compared to equivalent private sector ones.
I’ll have to look it up but my sense is the French strike practically as a national pasttime. Seems some group or other is striking constantly in France.
Not too long ago I recall French farmers striking over changes in French farming policy (which honestly was in desperate need of reworking but the farmers were having none of it). It may have been elsewhere but I recall a picture of a farmer with a cow squirting milk (right out of the cow) at police.
Then I’m as curious as RickJay - if such protests happened in the U.S., as Jacquelope apparantly wants, what exactly would they be protesting and against whom would they be directed?
Perhaps he is being proactive, in case the GOP regains control of one or more houses of Congress and begins to try to reduce the deficit. Or perhaps he objects to the TARP payments, and the GM bailout.
Or possibly he is really under the impression that problems of this kind can be fixed with marches and protests.
Hard to say unless he returns to defend his position, whatever it might be.
That link is about public wages in the US.
What have American public sector wages got to do with the situation in Europe?
Also, rather than support your point, it seems to suggest that there is still an ongoing debate about whether or not public service workers actually are overpaid or not.
So depending on methodology, public service workers could be underpaid. In the US, of course. This link (pdf) is a study of public versus private wages in France, England and Italy.
So no one is vastly underpaid, or overpaid. Sounds like a good system to me.