Moderator: Community Team






























Night Strike wrote:So now Obama is praising Boeing when he was the one who tried to prevent them from creating jobs in other states?![]()
![]()
Pure politics right there.

















Juan_Bottom wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwLW08DJaL8
He's the best president of all time. But did he make these statements because he knows that Congress is too stupid to put it all together? Also, is it not awesome that a minority of economists have begun predicting a boom in American production and an end to the recession? Dude Obama is a hero. He's like America's Batman. I love the fact that he's targeting companies like Apple by saying that he's not going to spend our money to protect their Chinese manufacturing.
<3
Also?
761 views - SAD




















jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...





































3




2















natty dread wrote:I fed some bread crumbs to mallards a few years ago.
ARE YOU SAYING REPUBLICANS ACCEPT HANDOUTS???










Night Strike wrote:So now Obama is praising Boeing when he was the one who tried to prevent them from creating jobs in other states?![]()
![]()
Pure politics right there.
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.










spurgistan wrote:Night Strike wrote:So now Obama is praising Boeing when he was the one who tried to prevent them from creating jobs in other states?![]()
![]()
Pure politics right there.
As long as you equate "Barack Obama" with "established laws that protect worker's ability to strike," then yes. The President (or something) of Boeing said he was considering moving to South Carolina because of strikes at the existing plant. That's against the law. Barack Obama is not the law. You fail.





































The Bison King wrote:Night Strike wrote:So now Obama is praising Boeing when he was the one who tried to prevent them from creating jobs in other states?![]()
![]()
Pure politics right there.
Yeah it looks like Boeing is really hurting.






























thegreekdog wrote:spurgistan wrote:Night Strike wrote:So now Obama is praising Boeing when he was the one who tried to prevent them from creating jobs in other states?![]()
![]()
Pure politics right there.
As long as you equate "Barack Obama" with "established laws that protect worker's ability to strike," then yes. The President (or something) of Boeing said he was considering moving to South Carolina because of strikes at the existing plant. That's against the law. Barack Obama is not the law. You fail.
Is it really against the law? I'm not so sure about that.
Do you know why Boeing wanted to move to South Carolina (I mean apart from "because of the strikes")?
NYTimes, 4/26/2011 wrote:The N.L.R.B.’s case rests on statements by Boeing officials that, it believes, prove retaliation. One Boeing executive told The Seattle Times that the main reason to put the new line in South Carolina was “that we cannot afford to have a work stoppage, you know, every three years.”
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.










spurgistan wrote:thegreekdog wrote:spurgistan wrote:Night Strike wrote:So now Obama is praising Boeing when he was the one who tried to prevent them from creating jobs in other states?![]()
![]()
Pure politics right there.
As long as you equate "Barack Obama" with "established laws that protect worker's ability to strike," then yes. The President (or something) of Boeing said he was considering moving to South Carolina because of strikes at the existing plant. That's against the law. Barack Obama is not the law. You fail.
Is it really against the law? I'm not so sure about that.
Do you know why Boeing wanted to move to South Carolina (I mean apart from "because of the strikes")?NYTimes, 4/26/2011 wrote:The N.L.R.B.’s case rests on statements by Boeing officials that, it believes, prove retaliation. One Boeing executive told The Seattle Times that the main reason to put the new line in South Carolina was “that we cannot afford to have a work stoppage, you know, every three years.”




















Night Strike wrote:spurgistan wrote:thegreekdog wrote:spurgistan wrote:Night Strike wrote:So now Obama is praising Boeing when he was the one who tried to prevent them from creating jobs in other states?![]()
![]()
Pure politics right there.
As long as you equate "Barack Obama" with "established laws that protect worker's ability to strike," then yes. The President (or something) of Boeing said he was considering moving to South Carolina because of strikes at the existing plant. That's against the law. Barack Obama is not the law. You fail.
Is it really against the law? I'm not so sure about that.
Do you know why Boeing wanted to move to South Carolina (I mean apart from "because of the strikes")?NYTimes, 4/26/2011 wrote:The N.L.R.B.’s case rests on statements by Boeing officials that, it believes, prove retaliation. One Boeing executive told The Seattle Times that the main reason to put the new line in South Carolina was “that we cannot afford to have a work stoppage, you know, every three years.”
It's only illegal if they were closing the union plant in favor of opening a non-union plant. They were simply opening a NEW plant in a non-union area, but the union got jealous that they weren't opening it under the union rules. They were looking to ADD jobs, but since they weren't going to be union jobs, the union didn't want it opened.








































ViperOverLord wrote:How is it illegal? They wanted to move operations to a more business friendly state that wasn't going to obstruct their business plan. Unions have the right to bargain for wages, working conditions etc. But last I checked, they aren't allowed to tell executive leadership how they should run their companies.










spurgistan wrote:thegreekdog wrote:spurgistan wrote:Night Strike wrote:So now Obama is praising Boeing when he was the one who tried to prevent them from creating jobs in other states?![]()
![]()
Pure politics right there.
As long as you equate "Barack Obama" with "established laws that protect worker's ability to strike," then yes. The President (or something) of Boeing said he was considering moving to South Carolina because of strikes at the existing plant. That's against the law. Barack Obama is not the law. You fail.
Is it really against the law? I'm not so sure about that.
Do you know why Boeing wanted to move to South Carolina (I mean apart from "because of the strikes")?NYTimes, 4/26/2011 wrote:The N.L.R.B.’s case rests on statements by Boeing officials that, it believes, prove retaliation. One Boeing executive told The Seattle Times that the main reason to put the new line in South Carolina was “that we cannot afford to have a work stoppage, you know, every three years.”
I'm sure there are other factors, but that is why the NLRB filed suit. You can't retaliate against workers for striking. I feel like this got resolved when no actual jobs in Washington got cut.






























Juan_Bottom wrote:OMG - They were planning on closing the striking Union plant and building a new replacement plant in a non-union area. The courts decided against them. What's there to disagree with? MFG here we have a case where the guilty party is making confessions to journalists and you guys are still questioning the courts decision.




















Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.










spurgistan wrote:Right, I feel like in the end Boeing basically promised they weren't going to cut any machinist jobs in Washington, the machinists were like, "Are you sure?" Boeing was like, "ya srsly," the machinists were like "ok kewl lol" and the NLRB dropped the suit. You can argue that the NLRB was a bit overzealous in this case, but it's not some sort of Obama's War Against Business, because that doesn't exist.




















Woodruff wrote:ViperOverLord wrote:How is it illegal? They wanted to move operations to a more business friendly state that wasn't going to obstruct their business plan. Unions have the right to bargain for wages, working conditions etc. But last I checked, they aren't allowed to tell executive leadership how they should run their companies.
As has already been stated, it is illegal to punish workers for belonging to a union and striking.






























Juan_Bottom wrote:OMG - They were planning on closing the striking Union plant and building a new replacement plant in a non-union area. The courts decided against them. What's there to disagree with? MFG here we have a case where the guilty party is making confessions to journalists and you guys are still questioning the courts decision.




















ViperOverLord wrote:Woodruff wrote:ViperOverLord wrote:How is it illegal? They wanted to move operations to a more business friendly state that wasn't going to obstruct their business plan. Unions have the right to bargain for wages, working conditions etc. But last I checked, they aren't allowed to tell executive leadership how they should run their companies.
As has already been stated, it is illegal to punish workers for belonging to a union and striking.
No. It is not. A company retains its right to do business when union workers strike.










Users browsing this forum: No registered users