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Buzzfeed: Elon Musk is a Union Buster but he'll give you free Froyo & Roller Coaster

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Nairume

Banned
Im not a huge union supporter, but ive only heard shitty things about Musk from people I know and work with.
As have I, which is why I would give more consideration to the claims that things might not be great at Telsa than if it were "just" coming from a Medium article.
 

SummitAve

Banned
As with anything you can't generalize unions. They are as susceptible to corruption and poor practices as any thing run by a group of humans. The majority of unions that are even left act in good faith, and the benefits of collective bargaining are impossible to argue.
 

Nairume

Banned
As with anything you can't generalize unions. They are as susceptible to corruption and poor practices as any thing run by a group of humans. The majority of unions that are even left act in good faith, and the benefits of collective bargaining are impossible to argue.
Yeah, its easy to point at things like Tony Boyle having Jock Yablonski and his family murdered to keep control of the UMW as examples of union corruption, but it doesn't undo all the good unions have done and try to continue to do.
 
One of the very few areas where I part company with most liberals is that I am not at all in favor of unions. I have no problem with this.

this is literally the foundational reason for leftist politics. This is like "I'm Socially Liberal but Fiscally Conservative" it means you're right leaning

do you believe in workers having a say over their workplace?
 

Geist-

Member
If Musk wants to try to sweeten the deal for his employees to stop them from unionizing, I don't see a problem with that. If after that his employees decide they still need collective bargaining, then Tesla wasn't being honest about their working conditions.

Not every company needs a union, but the option should always be available regardless of where you work.
 

bomma_man

Member
this is literally the foundational reason for leftist politics. This is like "I'm Socially Liberal but Fiscally Conservative" it means you're right leaning

do you believe in workers having a say over their workplace?

Well, it makes him a classical liberal I guess
 
do you believe in workers having a say over their workplace?

To be fair I dont believe workers should have a say over what kind of donuts to bring to the workplace.

I say this as a worker...I truly honestly believe workers should be given little to almost no say over their workplace. I dont trust any of the engineers at my company to find their parking spot every day. I dont want them dictating policies.
 
The actual email from Musk:

At face value, Musk seems pretty reasonable to me. Plus, he's not lying when he says the forces against Tesla are many and powerful: established automakers, traditional fuel industries, the car dealership racket, as well as the politicians who answer to them all...love him or hate him, he's ruffled a lot of feathers.
 
Really like the neoliberalism on display in this thread :). Pretty frustrating to be when a lot of people claim to be left leaning but strongly oppose labor unions in favor of the interests and power of private ownership.
 
Unions are good and bad: they can either help you attain a livable wage or they'll make sure you don't get fired for murdering someone.

Either way, unions needs some regulations to prevent companies from letting go useless folks.
 
Really like the neoliberalism on display in this thread :). Pretty frustrating to be when a lot of people claim to be left leaning but strongly oppose labor unions in favor of the interests and power of private ownership.

If there's one thing I learned in 2016, it's that GAF is extremely neoliberal. GAF is not in any way, shape or form a left-leaning community. On social issues they tend to be liberal, but on economic issues they are all Ayn Rand.
 

teh_pwn

"Saturated fat causes heart disease as much as Brawndo is what plants crave."
As a few others have said, Unions can be healthy and destructive. An example of destructive is the rust belt - they got too greedy for the reality of what the jobs were worth and so the jobs left.

If there's one thing I learned in 2016, it's that GAF is extremely neoliberal. GAF is not in any way, shape or form a left-leaning community. On social issues they tend to be liberal, but on economic issues they are all Ayn Rand.

That actually describes a subset of Libertarians, which GAF mocks relentlessly.
 
Unions in general seem like a necessity in today's world, but there seem to be so many people that are vehemently against them. People who seem like they are arguing against their own best interests. I don't really know much about the history of unions in the US, but surely the opposition from common people, even if misguided, isn't entirely unfounded? What are some of the common arguments against unions from workers?

The general argument/reasons against unions basically boils down to power corrupts, more or less. Some unions have had shitty people running them that have done things that weren't necessarily in the best interests of the rank and file workers. And then there's unions like police unions, who have basically gotten nearly absolute protection for themselves at the expense of, well, everyone else in this country. Even without that, there's a really large disconnect nowadays between the leaders of unions and their rank and file members.
 

Infinite

Member
Unions are good and bad: they can either help you attain a livable wage or they'll make sure you don't get fired for murdering someone.

Either way, unions needs some regulations to prevent companies from letting go useless folks.
Basically some unions can be shit and they can be voted out democratically by the workers if they prove to be shit.
 
A lot of the tech industry seems to be run on the basis that you can treat people like shit if you tell them they're important and let them wear tshirts.
 
Not gonna lie the amount of people that haven't read Musk actual email in this thread is kinda scary. On the topic of unions though. I can understand why Musk wouldn't want to deal with them because he isn't lying when he says Tesla fighting a war on all fronts but I think he should atleast consider it. Also I don't know where everyone in this thread is getting him "supporting" trump from. If you guys are talking about him going to Trumps tech conference then Tim Cook was there also guys. Don't think either of them are to fond of trump.

The froyo and roller coaster part sounds like satire. These fucks are going to put The Onion out of business.

READ HIS ACTUA FLIPPIN EMAIL. For crying out loud if you read the thing the froyo and roller coaster come off as jokes.
 

Ri'Orius

Member
Why not take the cost of the stuff and add it to employees salaries?

Because employees won't notice an extra $50/year, but they will notice (and appreciate) the occasional frozen treat.

Which is to say that people in general aren't rational actors. Which is fine: I know I'm not.
 

Ether_Snake

安安安安安安安安安安安安安安安
Lots of pointless drama here. If the employees want to unionize, they will. If not, they won't. Done.
 

Cyrano

Member
Lots of pointless drama here. If the employees want to unionize, they will. If not, they won't. Done.
It's really not that simple. Most people who unionize do it because of the stability it brings to their families. People, especially families, tend to take a more complete look at their situation before making decisions that affect many more people than themselves.

Personally, the reason I'm happy to be part of a union is empathy and reciprocity. Being able to talk to other people with the same problems and get a real response is extremely heartening. Doing something about it is even better, which is what a union provides for.

Not "frozen yogurt" but, "healthcare for your wife". Not "rollercoasters" but "guaranteed pensions." Not as exciting maybe, but absolutely necessary for living a happy, healthy life.
 
Really like the neoliberalism on display in this thread :). Pretty frustrating to be when a lot of people claim to be left leaning but strongly oppose labor unions in favor of the interests and power of private ownership.

If I could delete a word, it would be the bolded. God this is the worst.
 

kyser73

Member
I'm surprised Tesla didn't adopt the German model of an internal workers body that has positions on management committees etc, and enables the workforce to act collectively without having to join a major union (of course the major unions are represented all the way up to board level in Germany).

Workers collective action is and always has been imperative to ensure hard won rights & conditions are maintained & extended. Whether that's through a traditional union or other organisational structure is less important than the fact it needs to happen & people need to be re-educated in the notion that collectively workers can challenge the Power and win.
 

Aureon

Please do not let me serve on a jury. I am actually a crazy person.
Yeah, rich people gonna rich people, with a whiff of "My work is more important than working conditions" thrown in.

Not very Tony Stark of him

Avengers-- don't assemble

Actually, that makes him even more tony stark.
Tony Stark is an asshole.
 

hollomat

Banned
For everyone saying this changes their opinion of him, did you not know he felt this way before? He's been very clearly anti union from the beginning of Tesla.
 
I like some of the work Musk has contributed to, but the last few months have made very apparent that his core audience will defend anything he does with barely a thought. Messiah complex.
 

notaskwid

Member
Surely as a multi billionaire he can't afford to have a union manking sure his employees get a fair amount of bread crumbs. Surely.
 
If I could delete a word, it would be the bolded. God this is the worst.
It's a real word and pretending it isn't won't make it go away?

It's an ideological shift that happened where austerity, privatization, and deregulation became prioritized over the stimulus and mixed economy consensus of the postwar era. Some people might misuse the term (the way they already do with liberal!). That doesn't mean it isn't real.
 

KHarvey16

Member
I think many people wish "union busting" in the past meant sending out an email arguing a position and asking people not to unionize.

And if we are to immediately dismiss any argument Musk makes against unionization because he is the business owner, as some have argued, why aren't we also obligated to dismiss any argument the employees make in support of a union? I think all claims should be evaluated regardless.

I think the interactions between unions and businesses are complicated. It may certainly be that Musk is making false or unreasonable claims in his arguments against unionization, but to simplify this as just "unions good, arguing against this union bad" is a little much.
 
I am not a fan of unions at all. I worked at a company that was unionized and it was terrible.

The older guys with seniority were incredibly lazy and barely did any work. If you wanted to fire someone you would basically have to fire everyone hired after the person because of seniority.
My company fired 2 hard working guys just so they could get to one of the welders.
Raises were capped at low percentages.

In our case we really didn't need a union so we got rid of it. Maybe Canada is different but our labor laws are pretty good.
 

Mr.Mike

Member
The labour market isn't a total monopsony. That said, it is true that for various reason individual workers have a lot less bargaining power than employers in the vast majority of situations. Unions can be good when they level the playing field between workers and employers. They go bad when they become an extractive institution in their own right.

And the bargaining is happening here. If you read the actual letter Elon does mention material things that have been done to improve the situation.

Elon Musk is the CEO and his job is to maximize profits. I know some people aren't about that. And I'm not at all a fan of Silicon Valley arrogance et all, but I don't really see what exactly he's done here that's so egregious. Of course he's going to try to negotiate for his side.
 
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