• @[email protected]
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      451 year ago

      He ended up getting them what they wanted just a couple months later. Check out the top comment threads here

      • @[email protected]
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        191 year ago

        He got them some sick days. A far cry from having their demands met. Particularly in the aspects concerning safety

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          Copying my response to the other guy here too:

          Safety is absolutely a serious concern, but can you show me some sources where safety was a sticking point leading up to the strike vote? The union literature from the time is very focused on sick leave

      • GodlessCommie
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        71 year ago

        No he didn’t, one of their largest complaints was safety. Democrats downplayed their strike as ‘sick days’ so it sounded like their demands were trivial.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          Safety is absolutely a serious concern, but can you show me some sources where safety was a sticking point leading up to the strike vote? The union literature from the time is very focused on sick leave

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              the fact dumbasses here are splitting hairs around sick leave, safety, and insane schedules is absurd. All are serious problems that shouldn’t exist.

              and it was viscerally demonstrated with multiple train crashes occurring during the period the unions were threatening to strike.

              • @assassin_aragorn
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                11 year ago

                When someone says that sick days weren’t a major strike demand and falsely claim without any evidence that safety was the biggest issue, it isn’t splitting hairs to ask for proof. If the distinctions don’t matter, then makes no sense to complain about safety vs sick leave.

                Which train crashes are you referring to?

        • @assassin_aragorn
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          41 year ago

          No, their largest complaints were sick days and a brutal scheduling policy. That’s what I remember from looking into this at the time, and what I’m finding looking into it now too.

      • @kmkz_ninja
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        11 year ago

        Can you show me where getting 7 sick days per year was what the unions were looking for?

    • @Know_not_Scotty_does
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      1 year ago

      The railroad guys got dealt a realllllllllly shitty hand with that one.

    • @CosmicTurtle
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      -111 year ago

      Yeah…

      Biden isn’t pro union. He’s pro-re-election.

      I’m glad he’s going out there to support the workers. But let’s not look past the fact that Biden forced the rail union to get fucked in the ass.

      • Cethin
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        261 year ago

        I’m totally OK with pro-re-election as long as he sees the direction the winds are blowing. They aren’t blowing towards conservatism or neo-liberal economic policy, even if that’s where he stands. Meanwhile most of the republican candidates in the primary are saying how greedy the workers are… I’ll take Biden. He’s not my first choice, and I don’t even like his political position on almost anything, but he is doing far better than I expected.

        • GodlessCommie
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          -161 year ago

          The day after the general election the direction of those winds will change, they always do

          • Cethin
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            141 year ago

            I doubt it. Biden is nothing if not a party man. I’m certain he wants his legacy to be that he brought the democratic party into new strength. He’ll accomplish that by pushing for more progressive policy that actually helps people. Will he fully go against corporate interest over people? Of course not. He won’t be as bad as you’re implying though.

            • GodlessCommie
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              -81 year ago

              He’s doing the same thing Obama did in his third year, sounding progressive as hell with lots of populous talk, gets reelected and turns full on corporate owned neolib.

      • @Cornelius_Wangenheim
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        1 year ago

        Biden was pushing for unions before the current pro-union zeitgeist bubbled up, which I think started with the first Starbucks successfully unionizing at the end of 2022. The CHIPS act and IRA both required recipients to employ unionized labor.

        • @clanginator
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          31 year ago

          First Starbucks unionization in that movement was Dec 2021, not end of 2022.