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Donnachaidh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-22-11 12:54 PM
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Unions and the Rich
http://motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2011/02/unions-and-rich

Here's another take on why even public sector unions matter in the fight against the corporatization of the political economy. The chart on the right, from John Sides, shows the overall union denisty for each state on the X-axis, and this is probably a fairly decent proxy for the level of public sector union density too. He concludes that unionization has essentially no effect on state budget deficits, but Matt Yglesias makes a different and equally salient point:



Looking at this chart, what I think you would see is that unionization levels have a strong relationship to progressive taxation. New York, Hawaii, and Washington are all high-tax states, especially on rich people, while the non-union south has generally low levels of taxation and regressive tax structures. The conservative movement is financed by rich people whose primary interest in life is lower taxes. And on an intellectual level, the main wellspring of conservative economic policy ideas comes from people who believe that progressive income taxes are very economically damaging. A secondary intellectual inspiration is people like Greg Mankiw who believe that such taxes are an immoral imposition on a genetic elite. A key problem with this agenda is that higher taxes on rich people are a politically popular way to solve budget deficits. The solution is to create a dynamic in which political parties are entirely reliant on rich businessmen for their financing. Reducing labor unions to a state of political impotence will get the job done.

more at the link --
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Combad57 Donating Member (2 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-22-11 01:14 PM
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1. Unions and the Rich
Private sector unions have been nearly bullied out of existence by the monied elite. It's not that they weren't partially culpable in their own demise with a history of corruption and bullying of their own. Howver in a larger sense, they were instrumental in creating the middle class in America. As the unionized labor movement declines so does the middle class.

What's needed now is organization of the entire work force, including nonunion working people, as a voting bloc with a voice. It's hard to think of an effective piece of legislation either offered or passed by Congress that enhances the life of the common man. The corporatocracy and monied elite guide and finance our politicos to the detriment of the common working man.
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blindpig Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-22-11 01:22 PM
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2. Solidarity of the masses is the rich's worst nightmare. n/t
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